Margot Philips Explained

Margot Leonie Luise Philips
Birth Date:5 April 1902
Birth Place:Duisburg, Germany
Death Date:30 December 1988
Nationality:New Zealand
Occupation:Painter

Margot Leonie Luise Philips (5 April 1902 – 30 December 1988)[1] was a New Zealand painter. Her artworks are held in the collections of Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki[2] and the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa.[3]

Early life

Philips was born to a Jewish family in Duisburg, Germany, the youngest of five children. Philips' father died while she was young, and by the early 1920s she was living at home to support her mother. Her parents died shortly after World War I, and Philips left Germany in 1935 to live in London, before travelling in 1958 to New Zealand to follow her brother Kurt Philips and his wife Trude, who opened Hamilton's first European-style restaurant, Vienna Cafe.[4] [5] The restaurant was known for its potato salad, eel, goulash and good coffee.[6] The family faced discrimination when World War II broke out, as they were classified as "enemy aliens" and required to report weekly to the police. Philips worked in the restaurant upon her arrival in New Zealand, and through waiting tables Philips became friends with Te Puea Herangi (Princess Te Puea).

Career

Philips took drawing classes at Hamilton's Technical School and the Workers' Educational Association, and then took summer school art courses at Ardmore Teachers' Training College.[7] She also took classes at Auckland Art Gallery's summer school, where Colin McCahon mentored and taught her. Philips' works focused mostly on her visualisation of the Waikato landscape.

Philips exhibited widely in New Zealand, including:

Death and legacy

Philips died on 30 December 1988, and a service was held at Hamilton Park Cemetery at Newstead.

Playwright Campbell Smith wrote a play based on Philips' life, titled This Green Land: Margot Philips – Painter, which drew on his memories of his own friendship with Philips, plus an interview with Tim Walker (then curator of fine arts at Waikato Museum) from 1987. The play was first performed in 2002 at Hamilton's Fuel Festival, directed by Alec Forbes, and in July 2009 a production, also directed by Forbes and starring Maria Eaton and Renee Casserley, was staged at the Waikato Museum to honour the 75th anniversary of the Waikato Society of Arts.[13]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Death search: registration number 1989/30060 . Births, deaths & marriages online . Department of Internal Affairs . 29 August 2018.
  2. News: Margot Philips. Auckland Art Gallery. 2018-08-29. en.
  3. Web site: Margot Philips Collections Online – Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa. collections.tepapa.govt.nz. en. 2018-08-29.
  4. Burns. Petra. November 2013. Margot Philips: Painting a Familiar Vision of an Unfamiliar Land, 1930s to the 1980s. The New Zealand Journal of Public History. 2. 1. 30–33.
  5. News: City's coffee story from Bob to Mob. Cann. Ged. NZ Herald. 2018-08-30. en-NZ. 1170-0777.
  6. News: Play paints lifelike picture of city artist. Irvine. Denise. 22 July 2009. Waikato Times. 30 August 2018.
  7. Book: Bell, Leonard. Strangers Arrive: Emigrés and the Arts in New Zealand, 1930–1980. 2017-11-17. Auckland University Press. 9781775589549. en.
  8. Book: Contemporary New Zealand painting and sculpture 1962. Tomory. P. A. Auckland Art Gallery. Association of New Zealand sculptors. 1962. 1005665882. en.
  9. Book: Palmerston North Art Gallery. Manawatu prize for contemporary art 1967.. 1967. Palmerston North Art Gallery. Palmerston North. 752209171. en.
  10. Book: The paintings of Margot Philips: a Waikato Art Museum exhibition.. Philips. Margot. Paul. Janet. Waikato Art Museum. 1983. The Museum. Hamilton. 233804074. en.
  11. Book: Margot Philips: her own world.. Philips. Margot. Paul. Janet. Walker. Timothy. Waikato Museum of Art and History. 1987. Waikato Museum of Art and History. Hamilton, N.Z.. 1019858718. en.
  12. Web site: Galleries – Waikato Museum. waikatomuseum.co.nz. 2018-08-29.
  13. News: President's Report. Simms. Martha. August 2009. Art Connections. 30 August 2018. Waikato Society of Arts. 1.