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Bloomsbury South: The Arts in Christchurch 1933 - 1953

Bloomsbury South: The Arts in Christchurch 1933 - 1953

Current price: $69.99
Publication Date: May 1st, 2017
Publisher:
Auckland University Press
ISBN:
9781869408480
Pages:
364

Description

For two decades in Christchurch, New Zealand, a cast of extraordinary men and women remade the arts. Variously between 1933 and 1953, Christchurch was the home of Angus and Bensemann and McCahon, Curnow and Glover and Baxter, the Group, the Caxton Press and the Little Theatre, Landfall and Tomorrow, Ngaio Marsh and Douglas Lilburn. It was a city in which painters lived with writers, writers promoted musicians, in which the arts and artists from different forms were deeply intertwined. And it was a city where artists developed a powerful synthesis of European modernist influences and an assertive New Zealand nationalism that gave mid-century New Zealand cultural life its particular shape.

About the Author

Peter Simpson graduated from and subsequently taught at the University of Canterbury. Simpson is the author of six non-fiction books, including Fantastica: The World of Leo Bensemann, Patron and Painter: Charles Brasch and Colin McCahon, Colin McCahon: The Titirangi Years 1953–1959 and Answering Hark: McCahon/Caselberg: Painter/Poet. He has edited, or contributed to, many other titles, including books on Allen Curnow, Kendrick Smithyman, Ronald Hugh Morrieson, Charles Spear and Peter Peryer. A former head of English at the University of Auckland, Simpson was also co-founder and part-time director of the Holloway Press.

Praise for Bloomsbury South: The Arts in Christchurch 1933 - 1953

‘If you could physically sense an author’s passion and thoroughness, Peter Simpson’s books would glow like fresh bread. His timely and lavishly illustrated Fantastica: The World of Leo Bensemann positively radiates, and yet again shows Auckland University Press to be New Zealand’s pre-eminent art book publisher.’ – Andrew Paul Wood, Landfall Online