The art gallery which planned to auction 60 works by iconic
Dunedin artist Ralph Hotere is "delighted" some of the works
will go on sale after a dispute between the artist and vendor
was settled last month.
The planned auction at Auckland's Art + Object gallery was
cancelled just before it was to take place in September last
year, after Hotere took a court case against vendor Annette
Asher, formerly Ferguson.
The planned court action was understood to concern ownership,
or the terms on which the works were "gifted to his friend
and colleague", Ms Asher in 1968.
A settlement was brokered between the two parties in private
in the High Court at Wellington last month, but court rules
say the settlement terms cannot be disclosed.
Gallery director Ben Plumbly said he was "absolutely
delighted" that 23 of the disputed works could now go on
auction on March 25.
"I think it's going to be incredibly significant," he told
NZPA.
"The whole 60 works would have been pretty phenomenal, but
the 23 works that we're offering still represents a pretty
amazing collection, and some of the particular examples in
there are absolutely top-shelf."
The works were produced from 1958 to 1968 -- an "early,
informative part of Ralph Hotere's career" -- and included
screenprints, drawings and paintings.
One series, entitled An Artist and a Poet, was the result of
the "long and involved" relationship between Hotere and noted
poet Hone Tuwhare.
"These are the first collaborative works between the two that
I'm aware of," Mr Plumbly said.
A series of abstract works, entitled Silent Protest, would
also be auctioned. The works were "seemingly quite devoid of
content and devoid of meaning", but research by art historian
Kriselle Baker found the paintings were a protest against the
Vietnam war, Mr Plumbly said.
"From an art historical angle, it's really nice to have those
works kept together." Some rare crucifixion drawings would
also go on sale, although a series of screenprints, entitled
This Land, would no longer be auctioned.
The dispute had been a difficult time for the gallery, Mr
Plumbly said.
"Certainly it's been quite a journey, and there's been more
downs than ups, but we're looking forward very much to there
being a big up on March 25," he said.
"Although the whole collection's not intact as it was, I
still don't think there's ever been this amount of work (on
auction) by an artist of the calibre of Ralph Hotere."
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