Rata Lovell-Smith

Aotearoa New Zealand, b.1894, d.1969

Bridge, Mt Cook Road

  • 1933
  • Oil on canvas board
  • Gift of the artist's son, Richard Lovell-Smith, 1981
  • 360 x 450mm
  • 81/49
  • View on google maps

Rata Lovell-Smith was a central figure in the development of the distinctive aspect of Aotearoa New Zealand’s twentieth-century art history that is often referred to as Canterbury regionalism. She, along with artists such as Rita Angus, Olivia Spencer Bower and Bill Sutton, focused on features common in the Waitaha Canterbury High Country: the bright, hard light, the nor’west winds and the resulting high cloud formations, swathes of tussock grasses and the breathtaking mountainous backdrop beyond the plains. These artists often emphasised human-made structures, such as this bridge on the road up to Aoraki Mount Cook.

He Kapuka Oneone – A Handful of Soil (from August 2024)

Exhibition History

other labels about this work
  • He Rau Maharataka Whenua: A Memory of Land, 17 September 2016 – 18 February 2018

    'This is the Mount Cook Road, and there are many bridges on that road. The people of Ngāi Tūāhuriri would go inland into the McKenzie [just below where this location is painted] for hunting high country weka [native woodhen] with dogs. They'd carry their empty packs of pōhā [kelp bags to hold preserved birds] with them to the hunting area, catch the weka and process the birds up there. They’d carry the pōhā out, and meet people coming from the south also going up to those high country plains. It was a summer exercise. Towards the end of summer the birds are fat. You preserve them like tītī [muttonbirds] in their own fat.' —Sir Tipene O’Regan