Theo Schoon: A Biography
By (Author) Damian Skinner
Massey University Press
Massey University Press
12th November 2018
New Zealand
General
Non Fiction
Biography: arts and entertainment
709.2993
Paperback
336
Width 190mm, Height 230mm, Spine 27mm
1030g
Emigre artist Theo Schoon was fascinating, unorthodox, controversial, pioneering and at times reckless. His life intersected with important cultural periods and places, where what it meant to be modern in New Zealand were being debated and articulated in art, literature, music and theatre. The art he pioneered and promoted - Maori rock drawings, the drawings of a psychiatric patient, Maori moko and kowhaiwhai, the abstract patterns of geothermal activity in Rotorua - were decisive for many other New Zealand artists, including Gordon Walters. And his example, as an academically trained artist with a good knowledge of modern European art and a commitment to do whatever it took to pursue his artistic projects, was both an inspiring and a cautionary tale. Schoon's is a life less well known now than it deserves to be. This superb, highly illustrated biography by one of New Zealand's best art writers corrects that imbalance and examines Schoon's claims on the development of art and culture in Aotearoa in the twentieth century.
Probably the most important art book to be published this year ... filling a long overdue gap in Aotearoas art history. ... Skinner has done a marvellous job of piecing together this carefully researched life. Andrew Paul Wood, City Art Depot The biography draws on a huge resource of written and recorded interviews and archival materials. It is a phenomenal piece of work, gone about not only with zeal and forensic precision, but also with an eye constantly on the bigger picture. Greg OBrien It's an easy book to love, with a large format, soft cover, clean design and generous helping of imagery: delicate drawings, abstract paintings, Mori-rock-art-painting-inspired prints and carvings, along with insightful personal photographs. Plus its important. It explores the development of local art and culture via one of the eras most original characters. Kathryn Webster, Art News New Zealand This biography is an intelligent and involved examination of him and his times. Beautifully presented, it is an important record. Jessie Neilson, Otago Daily Times
Damian Skinner is an art historian, writer, and former museum curator. He is interested in the history of cultural contact between Maori and Pakeha and the relationship between art and politics in Aotearoa New Zealand. He is the author of numerous highly regarded books.