A selection of key exhibitions shown at the Auckland Art Gallery post 1950. Exhibitions developed by other institutions are noted. • 1954
Frances Hodgkins and Her Circle Curated by
E H McCormick on the occasion of the Auckland Festival of the Arts •
1954 Object and Image Soon after arriving in Auckland to take up a job at the Auckland City Art Gallery,
Colin McCahon helps arrange an exhibition of New Zealand artists working in abstraction. The title of this exhibition is taken from his painting of the same name which presents the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary definition of the two key words. McCahon describes the reception of the exhibition as 'causing a bit of concern amongst the masses'. • 1956
Henry Moore: an Exhibition of Sculpture and Drawings Organised by the British Council for Canada and New Zealand. The exhibition's tour in New Zealand is initiated by Auckland City Art Gallery director
Eric Westbrook who knew Henry Moore. Its presentation in New Zealand is arranged by the new director
Peter Tomory who predicts that the exhibition is bound to be controversial. The Mayor of Auckland
John Luxford is tricked by a freelance journalist into publicly commenting negatively on the exhibition calling it 'a nauseating sight' guaranteeing major media coverage and record attendances of 36,700.[6] • 1957
Eight New Zealand Painters: Angus, Fife, Holmwood, Mrkusich, Nicholson, Sutton, Thompson, Turner The first of three exhibitions of contemporary New Zealand painters toured through New Zealand by the Auckland City Art Gallery • 1961
Painting from the Pacific: Japan, America, Australia, New Zealand • 1963
Retrospective: M.T. Woollaston and Colin McCahon The first large-scale exhibition of work by painters born, trained and living in New Zealand. • 1966
Fifty Scrolls by Sengai Organised and toured through New Zealand by the Auckland City Art Gallery with assistance from the
Queen Elizabeth II Arts Council and the Japanese Society for Cultural Relations • 1967
Marcel Duchamp, The Mary Sisler Collection: 78 Works 1904 – 1963 Organised by the Auckland City Art Gallery and toured through New Zealand by Queen Elizabeth II Arts Council of New Zealand • 1969
Frances Hodgkins 1869 – 1947: A Centenary Exhibition • 1970
Art of the Space Age This exhibition is drawn from the Peter Stuyvesant Art Foundation based in the Netherlands. The exhibition is brought to New Zealand and toured nationally by Rothmans Cultural Foundation (New Zealand) and the Queen Elizabeth II Arts Council of New Zealand • 1971
Ten Big Paintings In his catalogue introduction Director Gil Docking describes the exhibition as 'an exercise in positive patronage'. The artists selected are
Don Driver, Michael Eaton,
Robert Ellis,
Pat Hanly,
Ralph Hotere,
Colin McCahon,
Milan Mrkusich,
Don Peebles, Ross Ritchie, and Wong Sing Tai. The Gallery prepares and delivers the large stretched canvases of the same standard size and arranges for their transport back to the Gallery when complete. The exhibition is part of the celebrations for the opening the new Edmiston Wing. • 1972
Colin McCahon: A Survey exhibition • 1975
Van Gogh in Auckland •
1975 - 1978 Project Programme 1: John Lethbridge: Formal Enema Enigma The first in a series of 15 Auckland City Art Gallery exhibitions looking at recent conceptual and contemporary art in New Zealand • 1977
The Two Worlds of Omai • 1980
Len Lye: A Personal Mythology Curated by Andrew Bogle • 1983 - 1984
Aspects of Recent New Zealand Art: New Image Curated by
Francis Pound and Andrew Bogle, this is the first in a series of three exhibitions. The following two are
Aspects of Recent New Zealand Art: The Grid, Lattice and Network curated by Andrew Bogle and
Aspects of Recent New Zealand Art: Anxious Images curated by
Alexa M. Johnston •
1983 Gordon Walters Curated by
Michael Dunn • 1985
Claude Monet: Painter of Light Curated by the director
Rodney Wilson who visits 23 art museums worldwide to negotiate the loans of the 36 paintings. The funding of the exhibition relies on a private public partnership with the insurance company NZI and is one of the most successful exhibitions shown at the Auckland City Art Gallery. The previous record attendance was 67,000 for
Van Gogh in Auckland held in 1975. While Wilson hopes for around 80,000 visitors for
Claude Monet, the first two weeks alone see 43,000 visitors with long queues along Welesley Street. The total attendance is 175,679 A National Research Bureau survey finds that one third of the visitors have never been in the Auckland City Art Gallery before and that 43 percent of them come from outside Auckland. •
1985 Chance and Change: A Century of the Avant-Garde Curated by Andrew Bogle • 1987
Te Māori presented in New Zealand as
Te Māori-Te Hokinga Mai • 1988
Immendorff: Foreign Artist Project •
1988 Colin McCahon: Gates and Journeys The Auckland City Art Gallery's centenary exhibition curated by Alexa M Johnston • 1989
After McCahon: Some Configurations in Recent Art Curated by
Christina Barton • 1995
Paul Gauguin: Pages from the Pacific Curated by Douglas Druick & Peter Zegers •
1999 Stories We Tell Ourselves: The Paintings of Richard Killeen Curated by
Francis Pound • 2001
1st Auckland Triennial: Bright Paradise: Exotic History and Sublime Artifice The first in a series of five triennial exhibitions. Curated by Allan Smith • 2002
The Walters Prize 2002 The first of an on-going series of biennial exhibitions profiling contemporary New Zealand art. It is named after painter Gordon Walters (1919-1995) • 2005
Mixed-Up Childhood Curated by Janita Craw and
Robert Leonard • 2014
Modern Paints Aotearoa Examined how paint affected the work of New Zealand artists, the exhibition included Colin McCahon's
Northland Panels, on show at the Gallery for the first time in 25 years. • 2015
Billy Apple ®: The Artist Has to Live Like Everybody Else. Curated by Christina Barton and accompanied by the publication
Billy Apple® : a life in parts •
2015 Lisa Reihana: in Pursuit of Venus [infected] Curated by
Rhana Devenport •
2015 Necessary Distraction: A Painting Show Curated by Natasha Conland •
2017 Time: Connecting Past and Future, 18 June 2016 – 26 November •
2017 History Sees Division, 18 June 2016 – 26 November •
2017 The Subject in the Land, 18 June 2016 – 26 November •
2017 X Marks the Spot: Histories Negotiated, 27 August 2016 – 2 July •
2017 The Body Laid Bare: Masterpieces from Tate, 18 March 2017 – 16 July • 2018 ''The Māori Portraits:
Gottfried Lindauer's New Zealand: Te Hokinga Mai'' Curated by Ngahiraka Mason and
Nigel Borell •
2018 Gordon Walters: New Vision A joint exhibition with the
Dunedin Public Art Gallery • 2019
Louise Henderson: From Life Curated by Felicity Milburn,
Lara Strongman and
Julia Waite • 2020
Toi Tū Toi Ora: Contemporary Māori Art Curated by Nigel Borell (Pirirākau, Ngāi Te Rangi, Ngāti Ranginui, Te Whakatōhea) this exhibition of more than 300 artworks by 110 Māori artists occupies the entire Auckland Art Gallery. Embedded in a Māori world view, the exhibition develops themes of time and creation starting with the opening galleries representing Te Kore: the void.
Toi Tū Toi Ora attracts over 191,000 visitors with Māori visitation increased from 4 per cent to 15 per cent. The E.H. McCormick Research Library maintains a complete exhibitions list from June 1927. == References ==