Worshipping Beauty in the South Seas

Laura Campbell
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Abstract

This article analyses the wave of avant garde art movements that arrived on our shores in the late nineteenth century and its impact on applied art and the general lifestyles of artists and patrons in New Zealand. With particular reference to Kennett Watkins’ speech given at a meeting of the New Zealand Art Students’ Association’ in 1883, this account looks at the display of Māori objects in both public settings and in the privacy of the artist’s studio. It also acknowledges the role of illustrated magazines in promoting the public profile of professional artists working in Auckland at the turn of the twentieth century. Many patrons in the elite social circles of Auckland admired artists such as Charles F. Goldie for being arbiters of taste and hisbeautifully decorated studio both linked him to the ways European academic artists presented themselves, while using local artifacts to connect his practice to New Zealand. The dispersal of illustrated art magazines in New Zealand became a marketing tool for artists to promote their art practice but, most of all, elevate their status as members of the social elite in urban centres.
在南海祭拜美女
这篇文章分析了前卫艺术运动的浪潮,抵达我们的海岸在十九世纪后期和它的影响应用艺术和一般的生活方式的艺术家和赞助人在新西兰。特别参考Kennett Watkins在1883年新西兰艺术学生协会(New Zealand Art Students’Association)的一次会议上所做的演讲,这篇文章着眼于Māori在公共场合和艺术家工作室的隐私中展示的物品。它还承认插图杂志在促进二十世纪之交在奥克兰工作的专业艺术家的公众形象方面所起的作用。奥克兰精英社交圈的许多赞助人都钦佩Charles F. Goldie等艺术家,因为他是品味的仲裁者,他装饰精美的工作室将他与欧洲学院派艺术家的表现方式联系在一起,同时使用当地的手工艺品将他的实践与新西兰联系在一起。插图艺术杂志在新西兰的传播成为艺术家推广其艺术实践的一种营销工具,但最重要的是,提升了他们作为城市中心社会精英成员的地位。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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