Manawatu Guardian

Rural life captured on canvas

Artist’s exhibition reflects his lifelong love of farming and leads up to Feilding’s 150th

- Judith Lacy

The farmer is silhouette­d while the rising sun catches the backs of his sheep. They will soon lose their wool. Captured on canvas are the creases of the farmer’s trousers as one leg rests on the bar’s foot rail.

Ashhurst artist Graham Christense­n says painting teaches you observatio­nal skills: the colours of the light, where clothing creases, and that grass is not one shade of green.

He has been painting for about 12 years, but before that he had no interest in picking up a paintbrush.

Living on the Gold Coast, Christense­n and his wife Sue were talking about retirement. Sue said Graham was not going to be hanging around the house all day.

So in his early 60s, he went to some art classes and, because of the encouragem­ent from some “brilliant tutors”, decided it was for him.

Christense­n says he gets so much enjoyment from painting and becomes absorbed in what he is doing. He feels peaceful when he is painting tranquil rural scenes.

While picking up a canvas is relatively new for Christense­n, the rural scenes he captures are not. He has a varied rural background and a lifelong love of farming. He says he can feel what he is painting as he has experience­d it.

His first job was on Feilding Agricultur­al High School’s dairy farm during the school holidays. He also worked in a shearing gang as a school holiday job and can still smell the inside of a wool shed — the sheep, the sweaty shearers — and hear the vibration of the handpieces.

He says his knowledge and experience of farming is why he decided to paint art with rural themes.

About 90 per cent of his paintings are done using oils, the rest with acrylics. He prefers oils as he likes the way the paint flows and finds them easier to mix.

Born in Marton, Christense­n did his schooling in Feilding and his parents were members of the Feilding and District Art Society, as is he.

After leaving Feilding High, he worked on farms, then did a diploma in agricultur­e at Lincoln University.

He then worked in animal breeding research for the Ministry of Agricultur­e and spent a year living on Mana Island, near Wellington, managing the sheep breeding programme there.

Christense­n later worked at Massey University finding on-farm work experience placements for agricultur­e, horticultu­re and vet students.

He also farmed deer at Rongotea for about 25 years.

Then he and Sue decided they needed an adventure and bought a holiday business on the Gold Coast.

They lived there for about 12 years before deciding to move back to Manawatu¯ to be near their family.

The couple bought a 12ha farm between Whakarongo and Ashhurst. The old hay barn had been converted into accommodat­ion, and Christense­n and his daughter Natasha Christense­n have their studios there.

Christense­n says he has enough land that he can put his overalls and boots on in the morning to say he is a farmer, but if it’s wet, he doesn’t have to.

He’ll check on his Angus cattle and have a chat with them.

He has a soft spot for the Manawatu¯ Rural Support Service and will donate the money he receives from the sale of Let Them Out to the charity.

It’s the fourth time he has done this, and he says the arrangemen­t is also a way of promoting the service.

“It works; it’s ever so easy to do. They win by the promotion, plus a few dollars if someone buys it.

“I get some advertisin­g from them,” he says.

Manawatu Rural Support Service is a free and confidenti­al social service that primarily works with people in their own homes, supporting them with life challenges.

His father managed the Feilding sale yards, and his saddler grandfathe­r and great-grandfathe­r also lived in Feilding.

The Rural Life exhibition at the Coach House Museum in Feilding is a lead-up to the town’s 150th anniversar­y celebratio­ns in March.

Viewing the exhibition is included in the entrance fee to the museum that is open seven days a week.

The 28 paintings are for sale and the exhibition runs until Wednesday, February 28.

 ?? Photo / Judith Lacy ?? ashhurst artist Graham Christense­n’s exhibition Rural Life is on at the Coach House Museum in Feilding until February 28.
Photo / Judith Lacy ashhurst artist Graham Christense­n’s exhibition Rural Life is on at the Coach House Museum in Feilding until February 28.
 ?? ?? Graham Christense­n’s painting Shall I Bid on These (left) captures a big decision farmers make when buying stock while At Last (below) shows his ability to paint details like creases in trousers.
Graham Christense­n’s painting Shall I Bid on These (left) captures a big decision farmers make when buying stock while At Last (below) shows his ability to paint details like creases in trousers.
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