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BIOGRAPHY
DON PEEBLES (1922 Taneatua - 2010 Christchurch)
Don Peebles trained at the Wellington Technical College Art School
from 1947-50 and at the Julian Ashton Art School, Sydney from 1951-53.
He lectured at the University of Canterbury School of Fine Arts
from 1965 until 1986, and was the Head of the Painting Department
from 1980.
Since
his first exhibition in 1948, Peebles has continued to push the
boundaries of his art practice, never accepting what he has already
achieved, but striving for more. He has steadily produced a solid
body of work as he has pursued a unique path in his art. Like most
artists of the 1940s/1950s, he began painting landscapes but, since
the mid-1950s, he has focussed on and been committed to his practice
of abstract art. He was the first artist in NZ to explore constructionist
abstraction, becoming well-known in the early 1960s for painted
relief constructions which were typically framed in shallow-trays.
The interplay and effects of light and shadow this allowed, have
always held a fascination for Peebles.
By 1975, he was creating loose canvas works without frames, which
hung according to the natural inclination of their weight and added
relief elements. He also experimented with paper, creating exquisite
relief works and, by the early 1980s, had developed and enlarged
this concept by producing bold, large 'book page' reliefs. These
ground-breaking works consisted of strips of canvas sewn vertically
onto a larger canvas, and were likened to book leaves or gills.
They achieved a sense of movement and evoked elements of nature.
Each hanging was different in its effect due to the fluid nature
of the canvas, and the light playing on the leaves. To some he attached
cord, or strips of canvas looping across the whole or dangling from
a part, or interlocking, shaped, canvas pieces.
In the late 1990s, Peebles returned to working more frequently on
a smaller scale, creating balance and tension within works in paint
on canvas on board, again within 'tray frames'. By applying subtle
markings in pencil or paint, or even leaving threads of canvas showing
at the edges, Peebles lures the eye to explore each work in depth.
An exhibition at Artis Gallery, Auckland, in the year of his 80th
birthday proved again his ability to produce paintings of great
beauty, while still retaining the 'cutting edge' that has always
typified his work. In confirmation of the heightening interest in
his work, all but one had either sold or was subject to a 'hold',
within a week of the opening.
Peebles was awarded the ONZM in 1999 in recognition of his services
to art and, in April 2003, the University of Canterbury awarded
him a LittD (Honoris Causa).
RETAIL
PRICE GUIDE:
Oil on canvas, 2,300 x 1,400mm $24,000
Oil on canvas on board, 650 x 820mm $ 9,000
Oil on canvas on board, 600 x 390mm $7,200
Watercolour
on paper, 220 x 300mm $1,400
DEALERS TO CONTACT:
Artis Gallery, Auckland
The Diversion Gallery,
Blenheim
Campbell Grant Gallery, Christchurch. Ph: 03-365 8300
BIBLIOGRAPHY
An Introduction to New Zealand Painting, by Gordon H Brown and Hamish
Keith. Collins, Auckland. 1982: 214-217 (illus).
New Zealand Painting Since 1960, by Peter Cape. Collins, Auckland,
1979: 95, 189 (illus.).
Two Hundred Years of New Zealand Painting, by Gil Docking. A H &
A W Reed, 1971: 170-172 (illus.).
A Concise History of New Zealand Painting, by Michael Dunn. David
Bateman Ltd, 1991: 118, 126.
New Zealand Art: Painting 1827-1967, by Hamish Keith, P A Tomory
and Mark Young. A H & A W Reed, 1968: Section 3: 4, 25-26 (illus.).
Forty Modern New Zealand Paintings, by Francis Pound. Penguin, Auckland,
1985: np (illus.).
Review, by Michael Thomas. Art New Zealand 13, 1979: 19, 67 (illus.).
Cross Currents, by Linda Tyler and Ken Orchard. Waikato Museum of
Art and History, 1991: 21 (illus.) (catalogue).
'The Veteran: Don Peebles', by Justin Paton. Art New Zealand 71,
1994: 60-64 (illus.).
Don Peebles: The Harmony of Opposites', by Justin Paton. Hazard
Press, 1996.
'Don Peebles at 75', by Peter Simpson. Art New Zealand 83, 1997:
67-71 (illus.).
Contemporary New Zealand Art 3, by Elizabeth Caughey and John Gow.
David Bateman Ltd, 2002
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