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H I S T O R Y

 
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1977- 81 Parikiore

The distinctive shape of Parikiore Mountain dominates the skyline north-west of Kamo, in Whangarei. At first my paintings were about the relationship between mass and void. I found by observing the movement of clouds through and around the peaks I could make a positive statement about this.

East Cloud Shapes II 1977 oil on board 500 x 850mm Private Collection

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The later paintings were initiated as a visual response to bird songs within the environment of Parikiore and in association with the surrounding landscape - as mass and void, bird and space, earth and song. For me these songs and calls were a comparison that helped me to define the weight and presence of the landforms. I was also captivated by the intricate dance of skylarks, and the way their song imitated their movements.

Grey Warbler / Jounneaux’s Farm 1980 oil on board 500 x 850mm Private Collection

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1983 Parikiore and Duntroon
These works developed through the examination of two very different landscapes - Parikiore, a distinctively shaped hill in of volcanic origin in Northland, and the tail end of a range of mountains along the Waitaki river in North Otago. The comparisons are more philosophic than geographic.

House/Parikiore 1983 oil on board 600 x 900 mm Private Collection

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Just as certain similarities in the landscapes of north and south revealed themselves during the painting process, so too the pictorial relationship between landform and self developed very closely, ultimately revealing something of the true nature of both.

Duntroon Hills 1 1983 oil on board 900 x 1200mm Private Collection

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1987 Maungatapere, Maunu and Hurupaki
This series were painted mainly in a rented studio at the Northland Craft Trust Quarry. Being in the company of people with a serious commitment to making art created an atmosphere in which my paintings virtually painted themselves. I was exploring the identity of the three volcanic cones that stretch in a line across the landscape between Maungakaramea and Whangarei. These cones - Maungatapere, Maunu and Hurupaki are striking in their geometric beauty.

Hurupaki, Maunu & Maungatapere 1987 oil and papier colle on board 850 x 1260mm Private Collection

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The red heart of the painting Maungatapere/Lost refers to the volcanic nature of the mountain - hot lava in the earth; and symbolises the mountain’s vitality - the ability to nurture and maintain life. The strong gestural markmaking expressed the violence and power inherent in all of these mountains; the x that developed here in the sky and became stronger in supporting paintings associates itself with denial and love. These were my farewell tribute to the Northland landscape.

Maungatapere/Lost 1987 oil and papier colle on board 1260 x 850mm Private Collection

1989 Waimauku: writing in the sky
In my early responses to Waimauku I tried to describe the weight, dignity and vitality of the land. While the landforms are quieter than those I knew in Northland, the light and patterns in the sky at Waimauku reveal the proximity of the vast and wild west coast. The song symbol that appears in the sky in some of these paintings and makes the substance of the landforms in others paintings is an extension of my earlier birdsong paintings, and here is a reference to the link between coast and land, and also the beauty and vitality I find in this landscape.


Song/Maber’s Farm 1989 oil and papier colle on board 800x1200mm Private Collection

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1991 Helensville and the Kaipara
Celtic patterns gave me the starting point for my explorations of the elaborate pattern of loops and serpentines across the landscape near Helensville that is the Kaipara River. The land is solid, enduring, permanent. The river moves and changes but remains constant in a wider context. I couldn’t resist the deeper symbolism offered by the river and land: the cycle of water and through this the cycle of life. This is why in some paintings I made the river from only one line. With no beginning and no end, the circle symbolises both perfection and infinity.
The light of the water is a reflection of the light of the sky. In the context of the early Waimauku paintings, the river is a messenger bringing light into the darkness.

Kaipara River 1991 oil on board 650 x 900mm Private Collection

1995 Travelling into the Dark: Te Ao Marama and Te Makuranga
The Te Ao Marama paintings are about the realm in which we now exist. On a deeper level, they reflect the sentiment revealed in the powhiri:
.... tuia ki runga, tuia ki raro | tuia i te here tangata | ki te wai ao | ki te ao marama ....

a calling together in the search for enlightenment. This powhiri has been a major starting point in the creation of this series of paintings.

Ki te Ao Marama 8/16 1995 lithograph approximate image size 42 x 15cm

Manaia / Renall’s farm links the Te Ao Marama works to Te Makuranga - which is also a quest for enlightenment and perfection.

Manaia / Renall’s Farm 1994 oil on board 800 x 1200mm

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 Te Makuranga is a traditional Maori design used mostly on the base board of pataka, but it also may be on feather or trinket boxes. The design consists of seven human figures separated by manaia, with a manaia at each end, facing outwards in a protective stance. The presence of manaia in Maori carving indicates a link with spiritual matters. Each human figure represents one of seven states of existence - The six outside figures are wananga (wisdom), oranga (life), ihi (power), mana (sovereignity), wehi (greatness) and ihowai (equality). Collectively they make a state of balance, makuranga, which is represented by the central figure. On reaching this state of balance, a person is ready to make the journey on the spiritual canoe - to continue in the next life.

Te Makuranga I 1995 oil & plaster on unstretched sacking 2500 x 700mm Artist’s Collection

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I have made many paintings of Te Makuranga exploring this concept. The human figures have been replaced at times by nikau trees, or spirals, and by the dead kereru - a highly personal symbol for me of the crossing through to the next existence.

Te Makuranga/Keruru 1997 oil on canvas 600 x 1070mm Private Collection

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The spaces between - the paths to reach the state of balance, Te Makuranga - sometimes darkness, indicative of the mysterious nature of our existence in the next life; the slashed canvas or white slashes indicating the ways through to enlightenment; the distant landscape represents Te Ao Marama - literally, the world of light - the realm in which we now exist.

Te Makuranga/Helensville 1996 oil on canvas 300x1200mm Private Collection

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1994 - 1998 The Tukutuku works
The Tukutuku paintings are part of a series I have been working on since 1994, originally as lithographs, in which they are as much about exploring the medium as about imagery. Several years on, these are still in the exploratory stages, working mostly with composition, colour and medium to remove them to a different plane from the traditional woven panels. They are less meticulously ordered then a real tukutuku panel, in an attempt to express the chaos of life; the fading of different hues and tones, of light to dark is an extension of the light into darkness that has become part of my Te Makuranga paintings, and as such is part of the life-after-death theme, and the role of spirituality in our daily existence. This idea has been very specifically employed in the painting Keruru/tukutuku, where the feather colours of the bird have faded completely, to become the colours of the tukutuku - in this painting the tukutuku acts as a vehicle to convey the idea of the spirit continuing after the demise of its physical body.

Keruru/Tukutuku 1997 oil on canvas 1070x600mm Private Collection

1998 Te Ao Marama
All the Te Ao Marama paintings relate to life in this world, as compared to the world after death, or before we are born. They have evolved through the process of the Te Makuranga paintings, which were concerned with death and the prospect of existence continuing beyond this.

Te Ao Marama: Kaiwaka II 1998 oil on canvas 1372 x 300mm Private Collection

The Te Ao Marama paintings are also about the literal "world of light" - the play of light on water, and the effects of light within the landscape. They are about the realm in which we now exist.

Waiheke towards the Noises 2 2007 oil on linen 1000 x 600mm Private Collection

2021

I continue t

o try and make sense of our existence through Te Ao Marama, Te Makuranga and the beauty that is paint.

Great Barrier Island: Awana 2006 oil on linen 1000 x 600mm

EXHIBITIONS

2008

Artists on Broadway - Morgan Street Gallery at Coutts Mercedes Benz, Auckland
On Taylor Road, Gallery West, Kumeu

2007

Biennale Internazionale dell'Arte Contemporanea, Firenze, Italia


2006

Autumn Collection, Palette, Auckland
Artists on Broadway - Morgan Street Gallery at Coutts Mercedes Benz, Auckland

2005

Found Morgan Morgan Street Gallery, Auckland, curated by Dr Carole Shepheard
Art for the Kaipara NZ Forest and Bird Exhibition and Auction
Artists on Broadway - Morgan Street Gallery at Coutts Mercedes Benz, Auckland
Mazda Artworks at the Hilton, Auckland
Auckland Art Fair, Britomart Events Pavilion, Auckland


2004

Artists on Broadway - Morgan Street Gallery at Coutts Mercedes Benz, Auckland
Land. Sea. Sky - solo exhibition Morgan Street Gallery, Auckland


2003

From Land to Sea with Jenny Bennett & Susan Webb, Morgan Street Gallery, Auckland
Artists on Broadway - Morgan Street Gallery at Coutts Mercedes Benz, Auckland


2002

Silent Light solo exhibition Morgan Street Gallery, Auckland
Art of Northland, The Edge, Aotea Centre, Auckland
Northland Group, Paihia
Rotary Charity Sale and Auction, Hilton Hotel, Auckland
Morgan Street Gallery Tenth Birthday Celebration

2001

Artists on Broadway - Morgan Street Gallery at Coutts Mercedes Benz, Auckland
Printmakers Group Show, The Porcine Gallery, Whangarei
Stonespeak Project ( Te Kowhai Print Trust) – Whangarei
2000 Artists on Broadway - Morgan Street Gallery at Coutts Mercedes Benz, Auckland
A Sense of Place group exhibition Morgan Street Gallery, Auckland
North Shore City Art Awards, Auckland

1999

Art at the Cathedral Visitor’s Centre, Auckland Cathedral of the Holy Trinity
Solo exhibition Morgan Street Gallery, Auckland

1998

A Sense of Place group exhibition Morgan Street Gallery, Auckland
Invited artist Outside the Circle Whangarei Art Museum, Whangarei

1997

Bennett & McBeath Morgan Street Gallery, Auckland
Solo exhibition Heritage Gallery, Cambridge
Native Bush group exhibition The Old Waipu Firehouse Gallery, Waipu
Four Artists from Morgan Street Gallery at Coutts Mercedes Benz, Auckland

1996

Paintings at the Quarry, Northland Craft Trust, Whangarei
Waitakere Licensing Trust Art Awards, Auckland
Tokoroa Art Awards

1995

Solo exhibition The French Art Shop Gallery, Auckland


1994

Solo exhibition, Art Stop Gallery, Whangarei

1993

Group exhibition Gallery 8 Orewa

1992

Solo exhibition, Whangarei Art Gallery, Whangarei
"The powers that be, the way they were" group exhibition, Whangarei Art Gallery
Solo exhibition Gallery 8 Orewa
Solo exhibition The Old Waipu Firehouse Gallery, Waipu

1991

Solo exhibition The French Art Shop Gallery, Auckland

1989

Solo exhibition The French Art Shop Gallery, Auckland
Central King Country Visual Arts Awards National Mutual Touring Exhibition

1987

Solo exhibition Northland Craft Trust, Whangarei

1986

Northland Society of Arts Summer Group North Gallery, Whangarei

1985

Solo exhibition Reyburn House Gallery, Whangarei
Solo exhibition Three Gables, Whangarei

1984

Solo exhibition North Gallery, Whangarei

1983

Solo exhibition Reyburn House Gallery, Whangarei

1981

Solo exhibition New Vision Gallery, Auckland

1980

Solo exhibition Reyburn House Gallery, Whangarei

1978

Invited artist 8/78 Arts Festival, Whangarei

1977

Solo exhibition Saint Clair Gallery, Whangarei

1976

Solo exhibition North 10 Gallery, Whangarei
NORTAF Art Awards, Whangarei
1974 Three Painters Library Gardens, Whangarei

Awards

2000 North Shore City Art Awards (Ross Holmes Lawyers Award)
1996 Waitakere Licensing Trust second prize
1996 Tokoroa Art Award finalist
1989 Central King Country Visual Arts Awards finalist
1976 NORTAF merit award

Publications

New Zealand on Canvas Edited by Denis Robinson New Holland Publishing 2009
Florence Biennale 2007 (exhibition catalogue) 2007
New Zealand’s Favourite Artists Edited by Denis Robinson Saint Publishing 2006
Art of Northland (exhibition catalogue) Paper Tiger Print Management 2002

 REVIEWS

 The NZ Herald |T.J. McNamara: solo exhibition at The French Art Shop Gallery September 1989
"A show with equal energy … is the recent work of Sarah McBeath at the out-of-the-way gallery above The French Art Shop in Ponsonby Rd.
This is an unheralded but very impressive show. The basis of most of the paintings is a swelling hill with a sombre light in the sky beyond. Added to this archetypal New Zealand image are two other forms, a jester and a maze shape.
The outstanding paintings are two called Maber’s Farm. Both have spectacular skies, and in one of them the curious maze symbol appears and adds a note of song to the scene.
The symbol is stretched vertically in Muriwai and disturbs the level of the horizon. This and the heavily angled Waimauku 6 are forced and mannered; but the exhibition as a whole is very powerful with the joker figures breaking through the prevailing sombreness."

The NZ Herald |T.J. McNamara: Central King Country Art Awards October 1989
"The Central King Country Art Awards are generous and the competition has grown from 250 entries in 1987 to well over 500 this year.
The work of the winning artists supported by other fine work from Sarah McBeath, Russell Hollings, Martin Young, Ted Kindleysides…must be stimulating to culture in the centre of the island."

The Northern Advocate | Stephanie Sheehan: group exhibition at Art Stop Gallery Whangarei February 1991

"The most memorable and powerful painting of the two dozen on exhibition is Maber’s Farm by Sarah McBeath. In this sombre work the land heaves itself up like a gutstruck whale, the water streaming off its flanks and evaporating into a luminous sky."

The Northern Advocate | Stephanie Sheehan: solo exhibition at Whangarei Art Gallery February 1992
"The bare bones of three volcanic mounts … are seen through shifting veils of paint.
The Kaipara River has become a braided knot impossible to untangle. In one, Journey, the cord departs from and returns to the same pot in an elegant reference to a life briefly assumed by clay before returning to dust.
In Helensville II the colour drifts and snakes through in a lazy meandering will-o-the-wisp of ochre, blood and cerulean spiking the moulded green hills with a fire of animation.
As well as a flickering dance, McBeath is interested in rich, impasto effects created by using layers of card, paper and lumpy paint on hessian, canvas and board."

The Northern Advocate | Stephanie Sheehan: solo exhibition at The Old Firehouse Art Gallery, Waipu December 1992
"McBeath is trying to find her voice, beyond imitation of nature or nemesis.
Taurapa is McBeath’s version of the traditional sternpost of a carved canoe. It shows man in the middle place between wood pigeon above and the lizard below. These are to define his relationship with God, life and death, says the artist.
They are big bold statements.
Te Makuranga is another large work, this time about two metres wide rather than high. Here the alternating figures and spirits pose like a line-up in front of the olive-green animal curves of the hills.
Subtle shading of blues and ambers with the mere hint of magenta makes these hues sing soft songs…
The seven principles of existence … look like patterns of concentrated energy that cannot be defined more clearly because they would then lose their value."

The Northern Advocate | Stefan Tengblad: solo exhibition at Art Stop Gallery April 1994

The NZ Herald |T.J. McNamara: solo exhibition at The French Art Shop Gallery February 1995
"The unpretentious but very fine exhibition by Sarah McBeath at the French Art Shop Gallery in Ponsonby Road succeeds in incorporating Maori thinking and motifs.
Almost all the paintings are Northland landscapes. Some are directly painted and for all their small size are full of atmosphere. They are little gems.
There is a second category of more profound work where the ancestral spirits that inhabit the land are made manifest in figures based on Maori carving.
Most of the work uses dark ridges with the light beyond. In Tuia I te Here Tangata there is a linked chain of motifs under the hills that very effectively suggests a continuum of thought and feeling associated with the land.
The skill and thought evident in these works is complemented by some works shaped like banners which involve a mask-like face framed by the unfolding spirals of fern fronds.
With this exhibition Sarah McBeath becomes a force to be reckoned with in New Zealand art."

The Northern Advocate | Stefan Tengblad: group exhibition at Northland Craft Trust August 1996

"Sarah McBeath’s Te Ao Marama and her Waimauku are fine landscapes playing on the movement of light as it travels across the land from its source within the sky.
They display good background fading effects. Perhaps signaling a new maturity in her works."

The Northern Advocate | Hilary Sumpter: group exhibition at The Old Firehouse Gallery October 1998
"Sarah McBeath’s volcanic landscapes are aptly Northland but her stand out are the Tukutuku panels.
An influence of McCahon is apparent in the panels."