Waikato Herald

Tribute to noted landscape artist

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One of Waikato’s most distinctiv­e artists, the late landscape artist Margot Philips, will be honoured with a special exhibition at Waikato Museum Te Whare Taonga o Waikato next week.

Philips, a Jewish painter, was born in 1902 in Germany and found refuge from the Nazis in Aotearoa New Zealand in 1938. She lived in Hamilton for more than 50 years and rose to fame as an artist during the 1960s and 1970s.

Developed by Waikato Museum curator Dr Nadia Gush, the exhibition, Of This Place: Margot Philips’ Landscapes, will showcase works from the museum’s collection, alongside paintings on loan from Te Papa Tongarewa, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, the Chartwell Collection and the Fletcher Trust Collection.

Gush says: “This survey exhibition offers a rare opportunit­y to see the breadth of an exceptiona­l Waikato artist’s career, and through her works, to experience this place which she came to call home.”

“It gives a point of entry into the life of a 20th-century migrant, a modern independen­t woman, a Jewish person in exile and an Aotearoa New Zealand painter. Her works present a landscape inseparabl­e from these experience­s, combining to mark her perspectiv­e as tangata Tiriti.”

Through lush Waikato farmland and parched South Island hills, Philips found a way to express her distinctiv­e post-war vision despite not having any formal art training.

When she first arrived in Hamilton, Phillips worked for her brother Kurt at the city’s first restaurant, the Vienna Cafe, and she wouldn’t start experiment­ing with painting until she was in her 50s.

By the early 1960s, Phillips had attended nine summer schools under the guidance of New Zealand artist Colin Mccahon, who became a lifelong champion of her work.

In fact, the upcoming exhibition will include Philips’ 1962 oil painting Landscape with Blue-green Bach, which Mccahon acquired for his personal collection.

Despite Philips’ standing in the national art scene, Hamiltonia­ns were often challenged by her landscapes at the time. Her contempora­ry experiment­ation and distinctiv­e use of colour were a confrontin­g contrast to the expressive realism that was popular at the time.

However, for many, she became the artist who best expresses the character of the Waikato landscape, with its rich, leafy green tones and the rolling rhythmic waves of its hills

and valleys. Philips once said she came to the realisatio­n that something inside her was destroyed when she settled in the Waikato.

“I needed something within me to build up again.

“I was terribly excited by the Waikato

landscape, once I was really ready to look,” Philips said.

During her lifetime, she held four solo exhibition­s in significan­t regional galleries, as well as numerous group shows. She died in 1988 aged 86.

Museum and Arts director Liz Cotton describes Philips as one of Waikato’s “most distinctiv­e” artists.

“We are proud to be highlighti­ng her work and showcasing these evocative landscape paintings which reflect our country’s landscape through a unique modernist perspectiv­e.”

The retrospect­ive Of This Place: Margot Philips’ Landscapes runs from today until September 17.

It is open daily from 10am to 5pm. Free entry.

 ?? ?? Waikato landscape artist Margot Philips.
Waikato landscape artist Margot Philips.
 ?? ?? Margot Philips’ The Nearby Hⓘll (1975), on loan from the Chartwell Collection at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki, is one of the paintings that will be exhibited at Waikato Museum.
Margot Philips’ The Nearby Hⓘll (1975), on loan from the Chartwell Collection at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki, is one of the paintings that will be exhibited at Waikato Museum.

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