by Jill Trevelyan (Author)
Winner of:
New Zealand Post 2014 Book of the Year, Best Non-Fiction Book
From Montana award-winning author Jill Trevelyan comes the first biography of Peter McLeavey, the charismatic, pioneering art dealer who since the 1950s has shaped--even transformed--New Zealand art. McLeavey's personal story is remarkable but in it, his contemporaries will recognise common themes: the religious upbringing; the struggle to be bohemian in a repressive, midcentury small town; the quiet agonies of marriage and children, the need to make a mark. Through exclusive access to McLeavey's extensive and hitherto untapped archive of letters, diaries, exhibition files and more, this book offers insights into the artists McLeavey has represented across half a century. Here, in their own words--lively, salty, and often heartbreaking--are Colin McCahon, Toss Woollaston, Len Lye, Milan Mrkusich, Michael Smither, Gordon Walters, Michael Illingworth, Don Driver, Robin White, John Reynolds, Yvonne Todd, and many, many more. Far more than a simple biography, this is the big story of contemporary New Zealand art itself, in a period of massive change and growth, and Trevelyan offers an utterly fresh and compelling historical account of the birth of the modern art market and the status of art today. A must-read for anyone interested in New Zealand's art, culture or recent history.
Author Biography
Jill Trevelyan is a curator and writer specializing in New Zealand art from the mid-20th century. She was the editor of Toss Woollaston: A Life in Letters, short-listed for the Montana Books Awards; cocurator of Te Papa's exhibition "Rita Angus: Life & Vision" and coeditor of the accompanying catalog; and author of Rita Angus: An Artist's Life, winner of the Montana Medal for Nonfiction.
Number of Pages: 496
Dimensions: 1.6 x 9.1 x 7 IN
Illustrated: Yes
Publication Date: October 01, 2013