13
BUCK NIN - Return to the Marae
Estimate:
$30,000 - $50,000
Sold
$47,500
Live Auction
The Silich Collection Part 1
ARTIST
BUCK NIN (1942 - 1996)
Size
134.2 x 147.5
Description
Synthetic polymer paint on composition board
Signature
Signed & dated 1974
Literature
Another inscription verso reads:
This painting is supplied with a black light to fluorecse [sic] the painting in darkness. To see this painting to full advantage / A lighting dimmer (-Variac) should
be used on ordinary light in the room.
This will give an infinite variety of florescent effects as the lights dim and the black light becomes effective.
Taught by Elam graduate Selwyn Wilson at Northland
College in Kaikohe (where, in 1960, his last year, he was
made Dux), Buck Nin was encouraged to go to art school in
Auckland. But the culture of that art school was not to his
liking, and he left after two years to enrol at the School of
Fine Arts at the University of Canterbury. There he studied
with expressionist painter Rudi Gopas (1913-1983) and was
encouraged to explore his Māori whakapapa, developing
a painting style which incorporated the koru and other
patterns derived from kowhaiwhai or customary rafter
paintings, carving and weaving.
Convincing others of the vitality of the new Māori art which
he and his peers were producing in the context of University
art schools, he convinced the Canterbury Museum to
mount an exhibition of young practitioners in 1966. Called
New Zealand Māori Culture and the Contemporary Scene
this hugely important exhibition toured first to Wellington
then on to Australia, Western Samoa, Singapore, Malaysia,
Hong Kong and Japan.
Equally proud of his Ngāti Raukawa, Ngāti Toa and
Chinese market-gardening heritage, Buck Nin was one of
the founding members of the Māori Artists and Writers
Association in 1973, and a renowned educationalist.
After art school he returned to Northland to teach at Bay
of Islands College in 1967 before moving to the Mormon
Church College of New Zealand in Hamilton, where he
worked for the next 20 years.
Celebrating the importance of the marae as the cornerstone
of a sense of belonging, this painting features interlacing
forms in the sky denoting a spiritual connection between
Māori and their land as tangata whenua. Delicately
highlighted with white paint, these lacy structures are
designed to fluoresce under black light just like white
clothing at a 1970s disco. Ever energetic in his pursuit of
excellence and innovation, Buck Nin completed a PhD in
Administration Arts and Management in 1981 and founded
Te Wananga o Aotearoa with Rongo Wetere in 1984,
participating in over one hundred art exhibitions before his
untimely death at the age of 54.
LINDA TYLER