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Brooke Gifford Gallery

Coordinates: 43°32′06″S 172°38′23″E / 43.5350°S 172.6398°E / -43.5350; 172.6398
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Brooke Gifford Gallery was a dealer art gallery focusing on contemporary New Zealand art that opened in Ōtautahi Christchurch, Aotearoa New Zealand in 1975. It was run by Barbara Brooke and Judith Gifford and closed in 2011.[1]

Pre  history

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In January 1959 André and Barbara Brooke open Gallery 91 in Cashel Street, Otautahi Christchurch. Although the gallery only survived for eleven months[2] it presented significant solo exhibitions by Rudolf Gopas, Colin McCahon,[3] Tosswill Woollaston,[4] Doris Lusk, Helen Brown, Douglas McDiarmid, Frank Gross, John Coley, June Black, and Olivia Spencer Bower.[5]

History

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In 1975 Barbara Brooke teamed up with Judith Gifford to open the Brooke Gifford Gallery.[6] The Gallery was located at 112 Manchester Street in a space shared with an antiques store although in time the Gallery did get its own entrance.[7] Brooke and Gifford were helped to prepare the spaces by Quentin MacFarlane who Gifford had married in 1959. Rodney Wilson, who was teaching art history at the University of Canterbury and went on to direct the Christchurch Art Gallery and Auckland Art Gallery, drew up the lighting plan and designer Max Hailstone created the Brook Gifford Gallery Logo.[8]

The Brooke Gifford Gallery remained the city’s only dealer gallery for contemporary art for many years.[9] In 1980, only five years after the gallery opened, Barbara Brooke died leaving Judith Gifford to run the space alone.[10] The first exhibition was by the painter Tom Field who had won the Hays Art Competition in 1963.[11] In July of that year the Gallery arranged with Barry Lett Galleries to show Auckland artists including Pat Hanly, Robert Ellis, Colin McCahon (Jump series works), Ralph Hotere, Carl Sydow, and Suzanne Goldberg.[12] Other artists shown in the first year of the gallery included  Don Binney, Ted Bracey, John Coley, Michael Illingworth, Quentin MacFarlane, Trevor Moffitt, Allan Pearson, Paree Romanides, Olivia Spencer-Bower, Karl Sydow, Tino Tibbo, and Charles Tole.[13]

A comparison with the artists included in the Gallery’s Thirtieth Anniversary show demonstrates the breadth of the roster over the years: Don Binney, Joanna Braithwaite, Shane Cotton, Maryrose Crook, Darryn George, Bill Hammond, Richard Killeen, Tony de la Tour, Quentin MacFarlane, Seraphine Pick, Peter Robinson, Ava Seymore, Terry Stringer, Grant Takle, and John Walsh.[14] Art historian Petrena Fishburn notes the significance of the Brooke Gifford opening in Christchurch two years before the final exhibition of The Group. For many artists the new dealer gallery was a major opportunity to present solo exhibitions on an annual basis rather than being one among many in the large mixed Group exhibitions.[15]

Selected exhibitions

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1978  House Alterations was Neil Dawson's first solo dealer gallery show. The exhibition presented a series of differing views of small houses. The critic Michael Thomas described two of them in his Art New Zealand review, ‘Magnification for instance shows the middle part of a house enlarged to form a circular shape; and in another work entitled Enlargement a tiny wooden house about 1cm in height stands supported only by a thin 'shadow' of wood in front of an enlarged version of the same building.[16]

1979 With funding from the Queen Elizabeth II Arts Council the Gallery assembled an ambitious survey exhibition of the sculptor Bill Culbert. Bill Culbert: London and New Zealand Works toured to public art museums throughout New Zealand.[17] In the same year Billy Apple made alterations to the gallery’s small print room in his installation Censure Realised: Brooke Gifford Gallery Christchurch.[18]

This work was included many years later in De-Building, an exhibition that was showing at the Christchurch Art Gallery during the 2011 earthquake.[19]

1982 Bill Hammond’s first exhibition with the Brooke Gifford Gallery. Art writer and critic Hamish Keith recalled seeing the exhibition, "I walked into that show and I was completely blown away ...he just made things out of who we are and where he was. An extraordinary artist."[20]

1985 To mark the tenth year of operation and marking the United Nation’s Decade for Women, Gifford curated an exhibition of women artists: Gretchen Albrecht, Claudia Pond-Eyely, Maria Olsen, Philippa Blair, Julia Morison, Sylvia Siddell and Merylyn Tweedie.[21]

Closure

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In 2011 a massive earthquake damaged much of Central Christchurch and although the building in Manchester Street was salvageable, it was in a prohibited zone and could not be accessed. Eventually, with the help of her family, Gifford was able to enter the building and remove the art works stored there.[22] For a time, again with the help of family members, Gifford continued operating the Gallery via a website and a space in Moorhouse Avenue where the gallery mounted an exhibition 36 years in the Zone. Artists included:  Laurence Aberhart, Joanna Braithwaite, Shane Cotton, Tony de Lautour, Darryn George, Jason Greig, Bill Hammond, Richard Killeen and Séraphine Pick. The gallery finally closed the following year.[23]  

Judith Gifford died 9 September 9 2021.[24]

References

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  1. ^ "New Chritchurch gallery opened". The Press (Christchurch). 27 May 1975. p. 13.
  2. ^ "Gallery 91 To Close". The Press (Christchurch). 13 November 1959. p. 15.
  3. ^ "Large Exhibition Of Recent Paintings By Colin McCahon". The Press (Christchurch). 9 October 1959. p. 13.
  4. ^ "M. T. Woollaston's Paintings Show Continuity Of Style". The Press (Christchurch). 26 March 1959. p. 12.
  5. ^ A Canterbury Perspective 1300-1990 Art in Canterbury Nga Taonga Titiro Whakamuri I Roto I Waitaha. Robert McDougall Art Gallery. 1990. ISBN 0908874006.
  6. ^ Wood, Andrew Paul (18 June 2005). "Painting's Rude Health". NZ Listener: 48.
  7. ^ "Reporter's Diary". The Press (Christchurch). 11 April 1975. p. 3.
  8. ^ MacFarlane, Kirsten (2 October 2021). "Life story: Christchurch gallery owner Judith Gifford's life in fine art". The Press (Christchurch).
  9. ^ Arthur, Gary (29 May 1985). "Ten Years for Dealer Gallery". The Press (Christchurch).
  10. ^ "Mrs B. Brooke supported arts". The Press (Christchurch). 22 March 1980. p. 6.
  11. ^ "Hays Prize 1963" (PDF). Christchurch Art Gallery. Retrieved 8 March 2024.
  12. ^ TLRW (8 July 1975). "Exhibition by Auckland artists". The Press (Christchurch). p. 11.
  13. ^ "Brooke Gifford Gallery". The Press (Christchurch). 3 July 1975. p. 4.
  14. ^ "30th Anniversary Show". Wayback archive. Archived from the original on 2008-10-14.
  15. ^ Fishburn, Petrena (2014). "Barbara Brooke: A Trend-Setting Art Professional in New Zealand 1959-1980 unpublished thesis for MA Canterbury University of Canterbury 2014". Retrieved 4 March 2024.
  16. ^ Thomas, Michael (Winter 1979). "Exhibitions Christchurch". Art New Zealand (12).
  17. ^ McCreedy, Athol. "Going Public: New Zealand Art Museums in the 1970s". Massey University. Retrieved 4 March 2024.
  18. ^ "Billy Apple 'Censure Realised' Brooke Gifford Gallery". Christchurch Art Gallery. Retrieved 4 March 2024.
  19. ^ Feeney, Warren (9 February 2011). "Un-constructing in the CAG". Retrieved 4 March 2024.
  20. ^ "Bill Hammond One of the Nation's Most Influential Artists has Died". Radio New Zealand. February 2021. Retrieved 4 March 2024.
  21. ^ Riley, Brett (29 May 1985). "Gallery Exhibition Marks Decade". The Star (Christchurch).
  22. ^ "Message From The Director - April 2011". Wayback archive. Archived from the original on 2016-01-21. Retrieved 4 March 2024.
  23. ^ "Judith Gifford". Bulletin (206). November 2023 – via Christchurch Art Gallery.
  24. ^ "Obituary Judith Gifford". Retrieved 4 March 2024.

43°32′06″S 172°38′23″E / 43.5350°S 172.6398°E / -43.5350; 172.6398