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Daphne Mason Railway Street Gallery New Zealand

Ticket Information

  • Free Admission

Dates

  • Sat 20 Apr 2024, 10:00am–4:00pm
  • Wed 24 Apr 2024, 10:00am–4:00pm
  • Thu 25 Apr 2024, 10:00am–4:00pm
  • Fri 26 Apr 2024, 10:00am–4:00pm
  • Sat 27 Apr 2024, 10:00am–4:00pm

Show more sessions

Restrictions

All Ages

Listed by

fionacable

At 92, Daphne Mason had well over 50 years of unbroken painting and mixed media work behind her, and was still drawing up until a week before her death in June 2020.
A finalist in several major NZ art awards in the 70s and 80s before moving overseas to London, her works are held in collections across Europe, as well as in America, China, South East Asia and Australasia. Returning home again to NZ in 2003 after a significant period abroad, her conservation block in Silverdale provided the space for distilling her thoughts and giving them form.
A fearless and yet forgiving commentator on the world she inhabited, Daphne painted with candour and prophetic vision.


Never giving in to what to her would be the luxury of a safe and easily recognizable “voice”, she chose to allow her journey to inform her work, which continued to evolve.
A true colourist, Daphne worked in a range of media, yet seemed most at home with the richness of oils. Her paintings revealed an ongoing exploration of colour and its visual “weight” in the balance of a canvas, as well as a lyrical exploration of how mark making coaxes out form.
To sit with a Daphne Mason, particularly the larger works, is to enter a world where one’s eyes retrace the journey of brush upon canvas again and again. In the colourist celebrations the result is pure delight; with her more political works the result is a sobering meditative pause.


Daphne Mason was a deeply spiritual artist, and that expressed itself in her attachment to the land, as well as in her commentary on humanity. She figured in the crowd in one “Crucifixion”, and was unafraid to use self-portraits to reflect the truth of the moment at the cost of vanity. Daphne addressed the challenge of both art and life fearlessly, and with gritty good humour, or (more rarely) despair.
Daphne was part of a small group of New Zealand female artists of her generation, who began her journey with no hope that her family could underwrite her art in any way; yet she managed to persevere and overcome for nearly 50 years.


After years of needing to support herself, her marriage and the birth of two children put additional demands on her time and attention, without reducing her resolve.
She began her exhibition career with a show at Hayah’s Gallery in Remuera in 1967. This was followed by shows at: Moller’s Gallery (1970 and a group show in 1971), Osborne Gallery (1971); New Vision Gallery (1975); Spinning Pot (1977); New Vision Summer Show (1977); New Vision Gallery (1981); and the John Leech Gallery (1986).


She had works selected in the following art awards: Tokoroa Art Award (1973); Wanganui Sarjeant Gallery Award for Contemporary Art (1973); Benson and Hedges Art Award (1980); and the Whanganui Art Awards, Sarjeant Gallery (1984) where she had two large works selected – almost unheard of at that time. In 1986 the Sarjeant also gave her a retrospective, an acknowledgement of the under-exposure of female artists like Daphne who had worked largely unrecognised despite their years of solid achievement in their field.


A move to London at the cost of her spacious studio in Parnell brought the challenge of the changeable and sombre West London light and much more limited space in which to create. Yet Daphne continued to show in group shows locally in London, including the Soho Festival in 1991, and was given a curated show at the Museum of Modern Art in Wales that same year.


Sometimes soothing or joyous, sometimes startling in their choice of colour, or almost harking back to the Art Deco tones of her Napier childhood, these works demonstrate that, in her late 80’s and early 90’s, Daphne was producing some of her greatest work ever with great vigour and delight.
Her latest works from 2016 onwards in particular, also reflect not only her connection to the land, but also her deepening concern over the encroaching property developments threatening her beloved native bush.

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