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΢ҕl art collection

06 December 2023

There are over 5000 works in ΢ҕl's art collection, making it one of the largest in the region. The major strength of the collection is its representation of Waitaha, Canterbury art and artists, in particular those who have taught or studied at ΢ҕl or the College of Education. Check out the ΢ҕl art collection.

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The University’s art collection is searchable online viaKā Kohika. As the library is able to digitise works and negotiate copyright clearance, images attached to records will continue to expand. If you cannot find what you are searching for online, please contact the Art Collections Curator for assistance.

  • Search the ΢ҕl art collectiononKā Kohika.

The art collection comprises 13 separate sub-collections, each with its own strengths and unique character, including:

The Macmillan Brown Library was established in 1935 as a bequest from Professor John Macmillan Brown. Since then, various donations have been made to the Library, mostly of works by artists who have had an association with the University or with the Canterbury region.

A major strength of the Macmillan Brown Library collection is its holdings of artworks relating to the early European settlement of Canterbury. Included in the collection are 155 paintings or drawings, and 5 sketchbooks by the Harper and Acland families, which are mostly pencil sketches and watercolours dating from the 1850s to the 1890s. These works illustrate the history of the Canterbury high country stations including Mt Peel Station.

The Library holds a collection of 75 watercolours and drawings by Ursula Bethell. A talented artist, Bethell is better known as one of the pioneers of modern New Zealand poetry, and was an integral member of the arts community in Canterbury.

A minor strength of the collection is its representation of the work of commercial New Zealand illustrators, including Russell Clark, Alice Mair and Leo Bensemann. The collection includes 182 original drawings by Russell Clark from his NZ Listener series, many of which relate to Aunt Daisy's food column.

There are 70 drawings by Alice Mair, which were used to illustrate the books 'Homes of the Pioneers'. The books featured images of historical homes and buildings from the Canterbury Region.

There is also a large collection of over 100 works by Leo Bensemann, who was a driving force behind the Caxton Press.

The Macmillan Brown Library also houses a large collection of historic New Zealand and European prints, dating from 1665 onwards. Included amongst these are prints by John Webber (1751-1793), Francis Jukes (1746-1812) and John Cleveley the Younger (1747-1786), which all relate to the voyages of Captain Cook in the Resolution.

There are also original works by:

  • Chrystabel Aitken
  • Florence Akins
  • Rita Angus
  • William Baverstock
  • Audrey Black
  • Leonard Booth
  • Derrick Breach
  • Catherine Brown
  • Edward Bullmore
  • Austin Deans
  • Spencer Digby
  • James Fitzgerald
  • Fatu Feu'u
  • Elizabeth Friberg
  • Doris Lusk
  • Molly Macalister
  • Viola Notariello
  • Evelyn Page
  • Alice Polson
  • Juliet Peter
  • Rosa Sawtell
  • Maya Semisi
  • James Shelley
  • Francis Shurrock
  • Graham Sydney
  • William Sutton
  • Michel Tuffery
  • Richard Wallwork
  • James White
  • Toss Woollaston

The Macmillan Brown Library was established in 1935 as a bequest from Professor John Macmillan Brown. Since then, various donations have been made to the Library, mostly of works by artists who have had an association with the University or with the Canterbury region.

A major strength of the Macmillan Brown Library collection is its holdings of artworks relating to the early European settlement of Canterbury. Included in the collection are 155 paintings or drawings, and 5 sketchbooks by the Harper and Acland families, which are mostly pencil sketches and watercolours dating from the 1850s to the 1890s. These works illustrate the history of the Canterbury high country stations including Mt Peel Station.

The Library holds a collection of 75 watercolours and drawings by Ursula Bethell. A talented artist, Bethell is better known as one of the pioneers of modern New Zealand poetry, and was an integral member of the arts community in Canterbury.

A minor strength of the collection is its representation of the work of commercial New Zealand illustrators, including Russell Clark, Alice Mair and Leo Bensemann. The collection includes 182 original drawings by Russell Clark from his NZ Listener series, many of which relate to Aunt Daisy's food column.

There are 70 drawings by Alice Mair, which were used to illustrate the books 'Homes of the Pioneers'. The books featured images of historical homes and buildings from the Canterbury Region.

There is also a large collection of over 100 works by Leo Bensemann, who was a driving force behind the Caxton Press.

The Macmillan Brown Library also houses a large collection of historic New Zealand and European prints, dating from 1665 onwards. Included amongst these are prints by John Webber (1751-1793), Francis Jukes (1746-1812) and John Cleveley the Younger (1747-1786), which all relate to the voyages of Captain Cook in the Resolution.

There are also original works by:

  • Chrystabel Aitken
  • Florence Akins
  • Rita Angus
  • William Baverstock
  • Audrey Black
  • Leonard Booth
  • Derrick Breach
  • Catherine Brown
  • Edward Bullmore
  • Austin Deans
  • Spencer Digby
  • James Fitzgerald
  • Fatu Feu'u
  • Elizabeth Friberg
  • Doris Lusk
  • Molly Macalister
  • Viola Notariello
  • Evelyn Page
  • Alice Polson
  • Juliet Peter
  • Rosa Sawtell
  • Maya Semisi
  • James Shelley
  • Francis Shurrock
  • Graham Sydney
  • William Sutton
  • Michel Tuffery
  • Richard Wallwork
  • James White
  • Toss Woollaston

In 1976, Mrs Alison MacGibbon bequeathed to the ΢ҕl a major gift of oil paintings, watercolours and prints, which formed the W.S. & Alison MacGibbon Collection.
Alison MacGibbon, nee MacLeod, was born in 1902.

She attended Canterbury College School of Art in 1918, studying plant drawing, design and embroidery. On her 21st birthday, Alison began collecting art when she received 10 guineas from her mother to purchase a painting.

William Smith MacGibbon was born in Edinburgh circa 1891 and came to NZ as a child. An accountant and businessman, William also served on the Christchurch City Council, and was involved in a variety of civic affairs and charitable organisations, including the Canterbury Society of Arts (CSA). He was awarded an OBE in 1952 for his work. In 1947, William married Alison MacLeod, and the two continued to acquire art for their personal collection.

The collection is comprised of 46 works, the majority of which were purchased largely between 1940-1960 from the annual sales at the CSA and from H. Fisher & Sons. The collection includes a discriminating selection of landscape paintings by artists who enjoyed a high reputation in Canterbury. Featured amongst the collection are;

  • Grace Butler
  • Duncan Darroch
  • Roy James Dickison
  • Rona Fleming
  • Cecil Fletcher Kelly
  • Colin Lovell-Smith
  • Rata Lovell-Smith
  • Archibald Frank Nicoll
  • Raymond Paul Olds
  • Harry Linley Richardson
  • Sydney Lough Thompson
  • Alister Austen Deans
  • John Gully
  • Utagawa Kunisada
  • Esther Studholme Hope
  • David Edward Hutton
  • Cedric Daniel Savage
  • Margaret Olrog Stoddart
  • Charles Nathaniel Worsley
  • George John Bruce
  • George Charles Haite
  • Albert Ludovici Jun
  • F.W. Scarborough
  • Louis Whirter
  • W. de la Kwye
  • Sydney Long
  • Hasui Kawase
  • Alison MacGibbon

For more information refer to, Julie King and Vickie Hearnshaw, School of Fine Arts Gallery, ΢ҕl, 1995.

Ernest Rutherford is considered one of New Zealand's most successful and respected scientists. Born in Nelson in 1871, he was educated at Nelson College for Boys, before attending Canterbury College. In 1892 he gained a BA in Pure Mathematics and Latin, and followed on with Master of Arts (with double First Class Honours) in Mathematics, Mathematical Physics, and Physical Science, and a BSc in Chemistry and Geology. In 1895 he began study at the Cavendish Laboratories in Cambridge where he conducted studies into electromagnetic waves, and radioactivity.

Rutherford accepted a professorship at McGill University in 1898, and remained there till 1907 when he transferred to Manchester University. He continued his studies into radioactivity, and applied them to the structure of the atom. In 1904 he was awarded the Rumford Medal, his first major science prize, followed by the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1908. After contributing to the war effort by studying means of detecting submarines, he capped his career by becoming the Director of Cambridge University's Cavendish Laboratory in 1919. Rutherford died in 1937, having been knighted and elevated to the Peerage as Ernest, Lord Rutherford of Nelson.

ճwas placed into the University's care by Lady Rutherford in 1938, after the death of her husband the year before. She hoped that the collection would be preserved and if possible displayed by the College. The collection consists of 36 medals, insignias and plaques. Included are thirty four medals presented to Rutherford in his lifetime, (23 dedicated awards, and 11 commemorative) and a further two medals struck in 1971 to commemorate the centenary of Rutherford's birth.

The medals reflect various styles from Rococo to neo-classicism through to realism. Many of the medals were designed in the late nineteenth century, and in art historical terms, they provide valuable insight into the Paris-centred Belle Époque and the American Beaux-arts styles, seen especially in the designs of French and American medallists.

Rutherford Collection

The library holds a large collection of original and secondary source material relating to Rutherford, including 26 academic diplomas, scientific papers, a short film and sound recordings.

Most material can be found via the Library catalogue. You can search for the manuscripts inKā Kohika- see the.

For more information refer to, Mark Stocker, ΢ҕl Press, 1999.

The Library Art Purchases Committee was initially set up as a working group of the James Hight Building Committee, in 1993. The terms of reference for the committee were to acquire works that would visually enrich and enhance the library environment. Any medium could be considered, and works were sought from both up-and-coming and established artists.

At the time of the committee's disestablishment in 1997, the collection had grown to include 63 works by 39 artists. The majority of these works are currently on display throughout the University Library (Central Library, Macmillan Brown Library, EPS Library). As with the Art Purchases Committee Collection, New Zealand artists predominate, and the collection also reflects the development of contemporary Māori and women artists.

A minor strength of the collection is its representation of the ceramic artists, including Len Castle, Doreen Blumhardt and Tony Bond.

Artists represented in the collection include:

  • Jill Beresford
  • Doreen Blumhardt
  • Tony Bond
  • Joanna Braithwaite
  • Hablot K.Browne
  • Len Castle
  • George Catlin
  • Gordon Crook
  • Bing Dawe
  • Margaret Dawson
  • Paul De Jager
  • Stewart Eggleston
  • Fatu Feu'u
  • James Fitzgerald
  • Karl Fountaine
  • Richard Francis
  • Rodney Fumpston
  • Spencer J.Hamilton
  • Chris Heaphy
  • Mark Lander
  • Marian Maguire
  • Patrick Malone
  • Robert Mcleod
  • Pat Mulcahy
  • Simon Ogden
  • Atsuku Osa
  • Stanley Palmer
  • Max Podstolski
  • John Poi
  • Michael Reed
  • Fred Roe
  • Wilhelm Ruifrok
  • Eion Stevens
  • Sandra Thomson
  • Philip Trusttum
  • Michel Tuffery
  • Shruti Yatri
  • Loretta Young

Established in 1988 on a student initiative, the Art Purchases Committee began with a modest fund to purchase and display contemporary art throughout campus.

The scheme has resulted in a collection of over 200 notable works of art, most of which are by contemporary New Zealand artists, many former students or teachers at the School of Fine Arts. The collection has a major strength relating to the rise of printmaking in New Zealand, and minor strengths in its reflection of the practice and philosophy of contemporary Māori artists and women artists. Artists represented in the collection include:

  • Laurence Aberhart
  • Gretchen Albrecht
  • Stephen Bambury
  • Aaron & Hannah Beehre
  • Graham Bennett
  • Rudolf Boelee
  • Christopher Braddock
  • Joanna Braithwaite
  • Catherine Brown
  • Tom Burnett
  • Zhonghao Chen
  • Judy Chicago & Pippa Davis
  • Gavin Chilcott
  • Barry Cleavin
  • Gary Collins
  • Sue Cooke
  • Helen Cooper
  • Denise Copland
  • Shane Cotton
  • Judy Darragh
  • Bing Dawe
  • Margaret Dawson
  • Neil Dawson
  • Tjalling de Vries
  • Tony De Lautour
  • Garth Des Forges
  • Jessica Douglas
  • Andrew Drummond
  • Fatu Feu'u
  • Luise Fong
  • John Bevan Ford
  • Neil Frazer
  • Dick Frizzell
  • Darryn George
  • Kristy Gorman
  • Jason Greig
  • Ken Hall
  • Bill Hammond
  • Chris Heaphy
  • Ralph Hotere
  • Linda James
  • Paul Johns
  • Robyn Kahukiwa
  • Richard Killeen
  • Mark Lander
  • Andy Lelei
  • Saskia Leek
  • Andrew Lukey
  • Doris Lusk
  • Quentin Macfarlane
  • Euan Macleod
  • Kathryn Madill
  • Marion Maguire
  • Adrienne Martyn
  • Eileen Mayo
  • Simon Mcintyre
  • Martin Mendelsberg
  • Carolyn Menzies
  • Trevor Moffitt
  • Julia Morison
  • Robin Neate
  • Anne Noble
  • Simon Ogden
  • Penny Ormerod
  • Stanley Palmer
  • Fiona Pardington
  • Tim Pearn
  • Don Peebles
  • Peter Peryer
  • Seraphine Pick
  • Max Podstolski
  • Claudia Pond-Eyley
  • Jude Rae
  • Peter Ransom
  • Richard Reddaway
  • Michael Reed
  • Pauline Rhodes
  • Peter Robinson
  • Helen Rockel
  • Michael Shepherd
  • Olivia Spencer Bower
  • Heather Straka
  • Zina Swanson
  • Grant Takle
  • Bronwyn Taylor
  • Kura Te Waru-Rewiri
  • Hamish Thompson
  • Paul Thompson
  • Jeff Thomson
  • Sandra Thomson
  • Riduan Tomkins
  • Philip Trusttum
  • Michel Tuffery
  • Merylyn Tweedie
  • Francis Upritchard
  • André Van Der Wende
  • Bianca Van Rangelrooy
  • Tim Veling
  • Marty Vreede
  • Gordon Walters
  • Ruth Watson
  • Marilynn Webb
  • Christina Wirihana
  • Jane Zusters

Registry Collection

Over the course of the University's history, a number of works have been acquired for or donated to the University as a whole, rather than to a specific department or school. 34 of these works have been grouped together and classified as the Registry Collection. Recorded amongst the small collection at the Registry are works by New Zealand artists such as W.A. Sutton, Barry Cleavin, Tom Taylor, and Don Peebles. The collection also contains ceramic works by Mirek Smisek and Michael Cardew.

Of particular note in the Registry collection is W.A. Sutton's The Four Seasons: Summer, 1970. This painting belongs to The Four Seasons, 1968-1970, a major series in Sutton's artistic career. (Autumn is held at Te Papa, Winter at the Christchurch Art Gallery, and Spring at the Christchurch Club).

One of the University's rare pieces of sculpture also belongs in the Registry collection, 'The Navigator', by Italian sculptor Francesco Somaini (b.1926). The work was acquired by the ΢ҕl from the 'Contemporary Italian Artists' show, toured by the QEII Arts Council in 1966.

No signed works by the well known artist Grace Joel are held in the University's collections. However, there is a single attributed work in the Registry collection. This is an untitled oil painting showing a young woman in a garden at around the turn of the 19th century.

Portraits Collection

The companion collection in the Registry is the Portraits Collection of notable figures. These include;

  • Portrait of Professor Bickertonby Petrus van der Velden
  • Portrait of Ernest Rutherfordby Joyce Aris
  • Portrait of John Macmillan Brownby Archibald Nicoll (2 copies)
  • Portrait of Professor A.H. Tockerby Archibald Nicoll
  • Portrait of Professor Denhamby Elizabeth Wallwork
  • Portrait of Henry Tancredby Elizabeth Wallwork
  • Portrait of Doctor Hulmeby Rudi Gopas
  • Portrait of James Hightby Elizabeth Kelly (2 copies)
  • Portrait of Dr F.J. Llewellynby W.A. Sutton
  • Portrait of Professor N. Phillipsby W.A. Sutton
  • Portrait of Professor Albert Brownlieby W.A. Sutton
  • Portrait of Vice Chancellor Pownallby W.A. Sutton
  • Portrait of Vice Chancellor Daryl le Grewby Martin Ball
  • Portrait of Vice Chancellor Roy Sharpby Martin Ball

For more information refer to 'The Art Collection of the ΢ҕl, Report' Julie King, ΢ҕl, Oct 2001

The Christchurch College of Education (CCE) art collection is comprised of 260 works of art. The majority of the collection has been purchased for display, as well as to cater to the teaching programmes at CCE. A small portion of the collection came from a former art loan scheme for Canterbury Schools.

The collection consists mainly of contemporary works of art (post 1970) by Canterbury artists, many of whom have been students or teachers at the Christchurch College of Education. There is a strong representation of works of art by Māori and Pacific artists. A minor strength of the collection is the New Zealand studio ceramics from the 1970s. Some of the artists represented in the collection include:

  • Ina Apse
  • Callum Arnold
  • Nola Barron
  • Janet Bathgate
  • Phillipa Blair
  • Katrina Boyd
  • Ted Bracey
  • Mark Braunias
  • David Brokenshire
  • Rosemary Campbell
  • Richard Carness
  • Ruth Castle
  • Kenneth Clark
  • John Coley
  • Gary Collins
  • Kate Coolahan
  • Helen Cooper
  • Roy Cowan
  • Elizabeth Crawley
  • Kahutia Creach
  • Harry And May Davis
  • Brett De Their
  • Tjalling De Vries
  • John Drawbridge
  • Belinda Drum
  • R.W. (Bill) Duston
  • Ted Dutch
  • Allie Eagle
  • Michael Eaton
  • Rik Edmonds
  • Frederika Ernsten
  • Lawrence Ewing
  • Tom Field
  • Paul Fisher
  • Amanda Floyd
  • Sarah Ford
  • Ted Francis
  • Brian Gartside
  • Tony Geddes
  • Darryn George
  • Peter Gibson
  • Rudolph Gopas
  • John Hadwen
  • Shoji Hamada
  • Joanne Hardy
  • Geoffrey Heath
  • Murray Hedwig
  • Martin Hodge
  • Kees Hos
  • Rosemary Johnson
  • Hamish Keith
  • Maureen Lander
  • Lily Liata
  • Graeme Lister
  • Richard Lovell-Smith
  • Peter Low
  • Steve Lowndes
  • Clive Luscombe
  • Vivian Lynn
  • Para Matchett
  • Max Mclellan
  • Ray Neuman
  • Alan Oliver
  • John Papas
  • Donald Paterson
  • Adrienne Pavelka
  • John Perry
  • Phil Price
  • Bonnie Quirk
  • Don Ramage
  • Ross Richards
  • Ross Ritchie
  • Kate Rivers
  • Ann Robinson
  • Pamela Searell
  • Peter Stitchbury
  • Brian Strong
  • Llew Summers
  • Eddie Sunderland
  • Graham Sydney
  • Carl Sydow
  • Junior Tawe
  • Bronwyn Taylor
  • Michael Thomas
  • Warren Tippett
  • Michael Trumic
  • Greer Twiss
  • Carl Vendelbosch
  • Gwyneth Walst
  • Gordon Walters
  • Malcolm Warr
  • Robyn Webster
  • Felicity West
  • Cliff Whiting

The ΢ҕl art collection also consists of:

  • Departmental Collection
  • Staff Club Collection
  • ΢ҕlSA Collection
  • ΢ҕl Foundation Collection

Further information

For further information, contact:

Te Puna Rakahau o Macmillan Brown|Macmillan Brown Library

Phone:03 369 4499ext. 94499
Email:macmillanbrown@canterbury.ac.nz

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