Strangers Arrive
Emigrés and the Arts in New Zealand, 1930-1980Leonard Bell
Auckland University Press
9781869408732
Hardback, 320 pages
RRP: 75.00
None of us had the faintest idea where we were going [but]
during 1938–39 . . . the town [Christchurch] was made strangely interesting for
anyone like myself, [with the] scattered arrival of ‘the refugees’. All at once
there were people among us who were actually from Vienna, or Chemnitz, or
Berlin . . . who knew the work of Schoenberg and Gropius.
– Anthony Alpers, 1985
Ranging across the arts from photographer Irene Koppel to
art dealer and printmaker Kees Hos, architect Imric Porsolt to writer Antigone
Kefala, Leonard Bell takes us inside New Zealand’s bookstores and coffeehouses,
studios and galleries to introduce us to a compelling body of artistic work. He
asks key questions. How were migrants received by New Zealanders? How did
displacement and settlement in New Zealand transform their work? How did the
arrival of European modernists intersect with the burgeoning nationalist
movement in the arts in New Zealand?
Strangers Arrive introduces us to a talented group of
‘aliens’ who were critical catalysts for change in New Zealand culture. This is
a visually stunning book with many rarely seen images of New Zealand art. An
accompanying exhibition will be starting on 10 November at Gus Fisher Gallery
in Auckland.
Leonard Bell is associate professor of art history at the
University of Auckland. His writings on cross-cultural interactions and
representations and the work of travelling, migrant and refugee artists and
photographers have been published in New Zealand, Britain, the United States,
Australia, Germany and the Czech Republic. He is author of Marti Friedlander (Auckland
University Press, 2009), Colonial Constructs: European Images of Maori
1840–1914 (AUP, 1992) and In Transit: Questions of Home and Belonging in New
Zealand Art (2007). He is co-editor of Jewish Lives in New Zealand (2012).
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