Leo Bensemann Explained

Leo Bensemann
Honorific Suffix:MBE
Birth Name:Leo Vernon Bensemann
Birth Date:1 May 1912
Birth Place:Tākaka, New Zealand
Death Date:2 January 1986
Nationality:New Zealand
Known For:painting, caricatures, printing, typography, publishing and editing
Notable Works:Portrait of Rita Angus (collection Te Papa Tongarewa)

Leo Vernon Bensemann OBE (1 May 1912 – 2 January 1986) was a New Zealand artist, printer, typographer, publisher and editor.

Early history

Bensemenn was born in Tākaka, New Zealand, on 1 May 1912 the son of Victor Bensemann, a blacksmith, and his wife, Ruby Arnold. He attended Nelson Boy’s School[1] and in 1931moved to Christchurch with his friend Lawrence Baigent. In February 1938, Bensemann and Baigent moved to Christchurch and flatted in a house owned by the artist Sydney Thompson at 97 Cambridge Terrace along with Lawrence Baigent.[2] Rita Angus also lived at the Cambridge Terrace address which became a meeting place for the Christchurch art scene with people like Louise Henderson, Olivia Spencer Bower, Allen and Betty Curnow, Francis Shurrock, Frederick Page and Evelyn Page, Denis Glover and Douglas Lilburn regular visitors.[3]

Career as printer and typographer

In 1935 Denis Glover and John Drew set up the Caxton Press and in 1937 printed their first art publication, Bensemann's Fantastica: Thirteen Drawings. Bensemann assisted with the printing of the book and this led to his joining Caxton Press as a partner 1937[4] and staying with the business until 1978.[5] In 1960 with architect Peter Beavan, sculptor Tom Taylor and others Bensemann helped form the N.Z. Design Association 'to develop and raise standards of design throughout the country'.[6] Recognising the absence of a journal devoted to contemporary art in 1966 Bensemann and Barbara Brooke produced the five issues art magazine Ascent.[7] [8] Art writer Ross Fraser congratulated Ascent on its ability to get their writers to push back and provide feedback good or bad.[9] Bensemann retained a strong interest in typography throughout his career at Caxton press and in 1969 was awarded a QEII Arts Council Travel Grant to Europe to study typography and graphic art[10] After leaving the Caxton Press Bensemann set up his own publishing house in 1978 producing several books under the imprint of The Huntsbury Press.[11]

Career as artist

While flatting in Cambridge Terrace and supported by Angus's nomination Bensemann joined The Group in 1938. Seven of the nine works he submitted to this exhibition were portraits – including a self-portrait, a portrait of Rita Angus and one of Lawrence Baigent.[12] [13] He continued to show regularly as a Group member and was represented in the final exhibition in 1977 with four paintings, this time all landscapes.[14] Bensemann along with his caricatures[15] and typography was a regular exhibitor of paintings in both dealer galleries and public venues through to the eighties. His work is represented in a number of public collections in New Zealand. The first painting to enter a public collection being  Canterbury Spring (1961) purchased by the Robert McDougall Art Gallery the same year it was painted.[16] A selection of his exhibitions include:

Solo

Collections

Christchurch Art Gallery

Auckland Art Gallery

Dunedin Public Art Gallery

The Suter Art Gallery

Awards

In the 1985 New Year Honours, Bensemann was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire, for services to art, literature and printing.

Notes and References

  1. News: 15 December 1924 . Nelson Education Board . Nelson Evening Mail . 3.
  2. Halliday . J . 2008 . Who was H Courtney Archer? . Architectural History Aotearoa . 5 . 55–64..
  3. News: 26 May 2015 . Viewing Rita Angus with Leo's eyes . 13 September 2024 . The Press (Christchurch).
  4. Web site: At Caxton Press . 13 September 2024.
  5. Web site: Caffin . Elizabeth . Publishing – New publishers, 1930s and 1940s . 13 September 2024 . Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand.
  6. News: 25 October 1960 . City Men Form N.Z. Design Association . 13 September 2024 . The Press (Christchurch) . 16.
  7. Web site: Ascent . 13 September 2024.
  8. Web site: Simpson . Peter . Bensemann, Leo Vernon . 6 August 2024 . Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand.
  9. Fraser . Ross . 1968 . Ascent . Landfall. . 22 . 1 . 106–107.
  10. News: 3 January 1986 . Obituary Mr Leo Bensemann . 13 September 2024 . The Press (Christchurch) . 5.
  11. Web site: The Black Arts . 13 September 2024.
  12. Book: Simpson, Peter . Bloomsbury South : the arts in Christchurch, 1933–1953 . 2016 . 9781869408480 . Auckland, New Zealand . 945106039.
  13. Web site: Exhibition of Paintings and Drawings by the 1938 Group 1938 . 13 September 2024 . Christchurch Libraries.
  14. Web site: The Group . 13 September 2024 . Christchurch Libraries.
  15. Web site: Leo Bensemann caricatures . 13 September 2024.
  16. Web site: Simpson . Peter . Bensemann Centenial . 13 September 2024.
  17. News: 22 March 1972 . Exhibition by Leo Bensemann . The Press (Christchurch) . 15.
  18. News: 9 June 1979 . “Cathy at Schaumburg", a painting by Leo Bensemann in his exhibition at the Brooke-Gifford Gallery . 13 September 2024 . The Press (Christchurch) . 23.
  19. News: 11 August 1981 . Two attractive exhibitions . 13 September 2014 . The Press (Christchurch) . 20.
  20. Web site: 40 Years of Leo Bensemann . 13 September 2024.
  21. Web site: Leo Bensemann: Paradise Garden . 13 September 2024.