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The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20090719044118/http://www.artsfoundation.org.nz:80/ralph_hotere.html
Arts Foundation of New Zealand.  

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Ralph Hotere. Ralph Hotere, Icon Artist 2003.
 
|ABOUT RALPH HOTERE | ||
 
 

1931
Born in Mitimiti
___________

1959
First illustrations
in Te Ao Hou
___________

1961
New Zealand Art Societies
Fellowship for study in
London at the Central
School of Art
___________

1969
Frances Hodgkins
Fellowship
___________

1973
Major exhibition
at Waikato Art Gallery
___________

1984
Represents New Zealand
at Fifth Biennale of Sydney
(with Colin McCahon)
___________

1994
Honorary Doctorate from
the University of Otago
___________

2000
Black Light exhibition
at Te Papa
__________

2006
Awarded Te Taumata Award by Te Waka Toi recognising outstanding leadership and service to Maori arts and culture. CreatedVoid with Bill Culbert, stand-alone work at Te Papa
__________

 

Ralph Hotere

Te Aupouri
Visual Artist

One of eleven children, Hone Papita Raukura (Ralph) Hotere was born in Mitimiti, Northland, in 1931. He was educated at Hato Petera College and Auckland Teachers' College, before moving to Dunedin in 1952 to specialise in art.

After a spell in the Bay of Islands as an arts advisor for the Education Department, Ralph was awarded a New Zealand Art Societies Fellowship to study in London at the Central School of Art in 1961. His time in England proved to be pivotal to his development as an artist. With the art world caught in a wave of general upheaval, which witnessed the advent of Pop Art and, subsequently, Op Art, Hotere found himself both influenced by the new movements and, as an outsider from New Zealand, at enough of a critical distance from what was new and trendy in British art to develop his own distinctive style.

Returning to New Zealand in 1965, he began to focus exclusively on his artistic career. Before being awarded the Frances Hodgkins Fellowship and moving to Dunedin permanently in 1969, Ralph had two important solo exhibitions in Auckland: Sangro Paintings andHuman Rights(1965) andBlack Paintings (1968).

During the same period he also struck up a relationship with the
New Zealand literary world, publishing four drawings inLandfall 78 and designing the cover for Landfall 84,which was to come to full fruition in subsequent years in collaborative works with New Zealand poets.

In 1979, he used his friend Hone Tuwhare's well-known poemRain to produceThree Banners with Poem, for the Hocken Library. The public appeal of this, and similar works is tremendous: the 1997 exhibition paying tribute to such collaborations, Out the Black Window, opened at the City Gallery in Wellington to an impressive 1200 visitors on the first day.

In 1994 Ralph received an Honorary Doctorate from the University of Otago and in 2006 was awarded Te Taumata Award by Te Waka Toi recognising outstanding leadership and service to Māori arts.

Ralph continues to produce work from his home in Port Chalmers and to exhibit his works.

"There are very few things I can say about my work that are better than saying nothing. "
Principal Sponsor: Forsyth Barr.

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