Gretchen Albrecht
{{Short description|New Zealand painter and sculptor (born 1943)}}
{{Use New Zealand English|date=December 2024}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2018}}
{{Infobox artist
| name = Gretchen Albrecht
| honorific_suffix = {{post-nominals|country=NZL|CNZM|size=100%}}
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| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|df=y|1943|05|07}}
| birth_place = Onehunga, New Zealand
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| known_for = Painting
| training = Elam School of Fine Arts
| movement = Color Field
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| website = {{Official website|www.gretchenalbrecht.com}}
}}
Gretchen Albrecht {{post-nominals|country=NZL|CNZM|size=85%}} (born 7 May 1943){{Cite book |last=Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa |title=Treasures from the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa |publisher=Te Papa Press |year=2005 |isbn=1-877385-12-3 |pages=77}} is a New Zealand painter and sculptor.
Early life and education
Albrecht was born in Onehunga in 1943, the daughter of Reuben John and Joyce Winifred Fairburn (née Grainger) Albrecht.{{cite news | url=http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=AS19430508.2.2.2 | title=Births | date=8 May 1943 | work=Auckland Star | accessdate=16 March 2015 | page=1}} She attended Mount Roskill Grammar School{{citeq|Q116775081|page=98}} and the University of Auckland Elam School of Fine Arts, graduating in 1963 with an honours degree in painting.
Career
=Art school and early work=
Albrecht's early work, during art school and the years immediately following, was figurative: 'the protagonist always a woman, and the woman was often nude'.{{cite book|last1=Gill|first1=Linda|last2=Pound|first2=Francis|title=AFTERnature: Gretchen Albrecht: A Survey – 23 Years|date=1986|publisher=Sarjeant Gallery|location=Whanganui|url=http://natlib.govt.nz/records/21999632|accessdate=14 March 2015}}{{Rp|4}} Albrecht's work in the 1960s was also more autobiographical than any later painting.{{Rp|5}} In the early 1970s Albrecht turned away from the human form and began looking at the landscape, her garden, and arranging natural objects on coloured backgrounds.{{Rp|8–9}} From 1970 she also began to use thinned acrylic rather than oil on canvas, which allowed her to paint more freely, and unprimed canvases that allowed the pigment to soak into the raw fabric, mimicking the watercolour work she enjoyed.{{Rp|9}}
=1970s=
During the 1970s Albrecht's work became more and more abstracted, although it often still began with observations of the landscape, making studies in places like Auckland's West Coast and Manukau Harbour.{{Rp|10}} Art historian Linda Gill notes that as Albrecht's paintings became more abstracted, her titles – originally prosaic, such as Table-Cloth with Curtain – became 'as poetic as her use of colour: Grey Ledge, Winged Spill, Storm Swell, Fritillary, Cushioned Fall, Penumbra.'{{Rp|12}} An exhibition of American painter Morris Louis' large abstract acrylic paintings at the Auckland Art Gallery in 1971 encouraged Albrecht's commitment to her abstract style and encouraged her to be more bold.{{cite book|last1=Brownson|first1=Ron|last2=Kisler|first2=Mary|last3=Fletcher|first3=Bronwyn|title=Gretchen Albrecht: Illuminations|date=2002|publisher=Auckland Art Gallery and Godwit Press|location=Auckland|isbn=1869620968}}{{Rp|10}}
=1980s and onwards: mature style=
In 1980, after a year spent travelling in Europe and the United States, Albrecht produced works that directly referenced European painters and the history of art rather than her surroundings, with titles such as After Piero, Giotto's Blue and Lunette (for Fra Angelico).{{Rp|13}} Her mature style appeared at this time, with her distinctive use of the lunette, which she calls Hemispheres, ovaloid canvases, what she calls Ovals, or oval motifs on standard rectangle canvases, which she calls Roses in the Snow. Albrecht first worked in the hemisphere form while living in Dunedin in 1981 as the Frances Hodgkins Fellow at the University of Otago: the artists has said 'I knew I wanted the hemisphere in 1981. I went to Dunedin with quadrants, the hemisphere happened in the studio, I put the quadrants together. I wanted to break out of the rectangle and the square, and to introduce a curve.'{{Rp|11}} In 1992 Albrecht described the importance of the curved form in her work, describing it as having 'a sensuousness and a female-relatedness that I can't describe in any other way. It had a generosity about it that the angular stretcher didn't have'.{{cite journal|last1=Kirker|first1=Anne|title=Gretchen Albrecht: A Study in Abstraction|journal=Art New Zealand|date=Spring 1993|issue=64|pages=68–72}}{{Rp|69}}
For a 1985 solo project at Auckland City Art Gallery, Albrecht made four works referring to the seasons. In an interview with art historian Anne Kirker noted that she conceived the exhibition as 'taking a room with four rooms and putting one work on each of them. So you're in an environment, moving from the door to around the room, looking at the work and out the same door again.'{{Rp|69}} In the same article Albrecht noted that she worked with the hemisphere form for most of the 1980s but series of collages made in 1987 and exhibited in 1988 showed the 'disintegration' of this form and the introduction of new forms, specifically the oval.{{Rp|69–70}}
She has been compared to Mark Rothko and particularly Helen Frankenthaler and other abstract expressionist artists. Albrecht has also expanded her work into oval metal sculpture since the early 2000s.[http://www.gretchenalbrecht.com/ Gretchen Albrecht Official Site]
Albrecht received grants from the QE II Arts foundation in 1976, 1978 and 1986, and travelled and worked extensively in the United States. In 1981, Albrecht was awarded the Frances Hodgkins Fellowship at the University of Otago.[http://www.thearts.co.nz/artist_page.php&aid=104&type=bio The Arts Foundation – Gretchen Albrecht] Today, Albrecht splits her time between Auckland and London.{{Cite web |url=https://www.papergraphica.co.nz/profile/gretchen-albrecht/ |title=Interview with Gretchen Albrecht |access-date=7 March 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150403002422/https://www.papergraphica.co.nz/profile/gretchen-albrecht/ |archive-date=3 April 2015 |url-status=dead }}
Major exhibitions
{{Expand list|date=March 2015}}
- 1964 Contemporary New Zealand Painting, Auckland City Art Gallery
- 1965 New Zealand Painting 1965, Auckland City Art Gallery
- 1969 10 Years of New Zealand Painting, Auckland City Art Gallery
- 1975 New Zealand's Women Painters, Auckland City Art Gallery
- 1982 Seven Painters/The Eighties, Sarjeant Gallery, Wanganui
- 1985 Artist in Focus, Dowse Art Gallery, Lower Hutt
- 1985 Seasonal, artist project at Auckland City Art Gallery
- 1986 AFTERnature: Gretchen Albrecht: A Survey – 23 Years], Sarjeant Gallery, Wanganui; National Art Gallery Wellington
- 1991 Cross-Currents, Waikato Museum of Art and History, Hamilton
- 1991 Signature of Place, Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, New Plymouth
- 1992 Distance Looks Our Way – 10 Artists from New Zealand, EXPO (@ Seville; toured to Leiden, Madrid, Zamora, BArcelona, Auckland Art Gallery, City Gallery Wellington, Manawatu Art Gallery
- 1998 Dream Collectors, Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa
- 1998 Leap of Faith, Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, New Plymouth
- 1999 ''Crossing the divide: a painter makes prints"", Sarjeant Gallery, Wanganui
- 2001 Prospect 2001, City Gallery Wellington
- 2002 Gretchen Albrecht: Illuminations, Auckland Art Gallery
- 2005–2006 Gretchen Albrecht: Returning, Dunedin Public Art Gallery and City Gallery Wellington{{cite web|title=Gretchen Albrecht: Returning|url=http://citygallery.org.nz/exhibitions/gretchen-albrecht-returning|website=City Gallery Wellington|accessdate=8 March 2015}}
- 2011 Gretchen Albrecht & Eve Armstrong, Making Arrangements, Michal Lett, Auckland
- 2012 Gretchen Albrecht: A Luminous Shade, Tauranga Art Gallery
- 2015 Colloquy, [https://tworooms.co.nz Two Rooms], Auckland
- 2016 Gretchen Albrecht: On Copper, Two Rooms, Auckland{{Cite web|url=https://ocula.com/art-galleries/two-rooms/exhibitions/on-copper/|title=Gretchen Albrecht, On Copper at Two Rooms, Auckland, New Zealand|date=2019-03-21|website=ocula.com|language=en|access-date=2019-03-21}}
- 2018 I come out of surgery looking golden, [https://tworooms.co.nz Two Rooms], Auckland
Major publications
{{Expand list|date=March 2015}}
- James Ross (ed), AFTERnature: Gretchen Albrecht: A Survey – 23 Years, Wanganui: Sarjeant Gallery, 1986
- Linda Gill, Gretchen Albrecht, Auckland: Random Century New Zealand, 1991
- Ron Brownson (ed),Gretchen Albrecht: Illuminations, Auckland: Auckland Art Gallery and Godwit Press, 2002
- Michelle Leggott and Gretchen Albrecht, Journey to Portugal, Auckland: Holloway Press, 2006
- James Ross and Gretchen Albrecht, Gretchen Albrecht: between paint and nature: five decades, Arrowtown: Nadene Milne Gallery, 2009
- Edward Hanfling and James Ross, Gretchen Albrecht: A luminous shade, Auckland: Globe Editions, 2012
Awards and recognitions
Albrecht was appointed a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to painting, in the 2000 Queen's Birthday Honours.{{cite web |url=https://dpmc.govt.nz/publications/queens-birthday-honours-list-2000-including-special-list-east-timor |title=Queen's Birthday honours list 2000 (including special list for East Timor) |date=5 June 2000 |publisher=Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet |accessdate=4 July 2020}}
In 2007 Albrecht received a donation from the Arts Foundation of New Zealand Award for Patronage recipient Jenny Gibbs.[https://www.thearts.co.nz/awards/award-for-patronage Arts Foundation of New Zealand Award for Patronage]
Collections
Albrecht's work is held in all major New Zealand public gallery collections, including the Auckland Art Gallery, the University of Auckland, Victoria University of Wellington, Sarjeant Gallery,{{Cite web|title=Gretchen Albrecht|url=https://collection.sarjeant.org.nz/persons/8797/gretchen-albrecht|access-date=2020-11-23|website=Sarjeant Gallery Whanganui|language=en}} Waikato Museum, and the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa.[http://www.gretchenalbrecht.com/CV/Gretchen%20Albrecht%20CV.pdf Gretchen Albrecht CV]
Further reading
- Ingrid Dubbelt, [http://www.art-newzealand.com/Issues1to40/exhibitions06akid.htm Gretchen Albrecht: Paintings'], Art New Zealand 6, June/July 1977, p. 9
- Gordon H Brown, [http://www.art-newzealand.com/Issues11to20/exhibitions19ak.htm 'Gretchen Albrecht paintings'], Art New Zealand 19, Autumn 1981, p. 12
- Peter Leech, [http://www.art-newzealand.com/Issues21to30/galls22dn.htm 'Gretchen Albrecht: The old age of Modernism'], Art New Zealand 22, Summer 1981–82, pp. 22–23
- Wystan Curnow, [http://www.art-newzealand.com/Issues21to30/7painters.htm 'Seven Painters/The Eighties'], Art New Zealand 28, 1983, pp. 34–38
- Priscilla Pitts, [http://www.art-newzealand.com/Issues21to30/albrecht.htm 'Gretchen Albrecht: The Early Years'], Art New Zealand 26, 1983, pp. 36–37
- Francis Pound, 'Albrecht's Hemispheres – The Realms of Connotation', Art New Zealand 38, 1986
- William McAloon (ed) [http://natlib.govt.nz/records/21658574 Art at Te Papa], Wellington: Te Papa Press, 2009
- Edward Hanfling, 'Rectangles, Rediscoveries & Radiance: Gretchen Albrecht on Continuity & Change', Art New Zealand 126, Summer 2010–11
References
{{Reflist|30em}}
External links
- [http://www.gretchenalbrecht.com Gretchen Albrecht official website]
- [http://www.nadenemilnegallery.com the artist at Nadene Milne Gallery]
- [http://www.fishersfinearts.com/mainsite/Artist.91 the artist at Fishers Fine Arts]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20060930205401/http://www.papergraphica.co.nz/artist_detail.asp?id=19 the artist at Paper Graphica, with interview]
- [http://www.nzonscreen.com/title/reflections---gretchen-albrecht-2006 Documentary about Gretchen Albrecht, NZ On Screen]
- [http://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/Person/51 In the collection of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa]
{{Frances Hodgkins Fellowship}}
{{Authority control}}
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Category:Companions of the New Zealand Order of Merit
Category:Elam Art School alumni
Category:20th-century New Zealand women artists
Category:New Zealand women painters