Sandy Adsett | |
Birth Name: | Raymond Henry Adsett |
Birth Date: | 27 August 1939 |
Birth Place: | Raupunga, New Zealand |
Known For: | Kōwhaiwhai painting |
Training: | Ardmore Teachers' College Dunedin Teachers' College |
Awards: | Arts Foundation of New Zealand Icon (2020) |
Raymond Henry "Sandy" Adsett (born 27 August 1939) is a New Zealand visual artist and educator. He is acknowledged for championing the art of kōwhaiwhai painting, creating a context for the artform within the development of contemporary Māori art.[1]
In 2020 Adsett was honoured by the Arts Foundation of New Zealand with an Icon Whakamana Hiranga award "for his profound impact on the Māori community and Māori arts education system within Aotearoa."[2]
Adsett was born in Raupunga near Wairoa on 27 August 1939.[3] Of Māori descent, he affiliates to Ngāti Kahungunu and Ngāti Pāhauwera. He attended Te Aute College in Hawkes Bay. His interest in art first began on his family farm as a way to fill in time and grew from there.[4]
He received his first formal art training at Ardmore Teachers' College in Auckland. He completed his third year of teachers' college in Dunedin.[5] While at Ardmore, he began travelling to regional schools to introduce Māori arts into the school syllabus. This was a focus of his work that would continue throughout his life. He was one of a group of teachers that started this work in the 1960s.
In 1961, Adsett became an arts specialist for the Department of Education's Advisory Service, within a programme established by educational leader Gordon Tovey. Adsett has cited the mentorship of the Ngāti Porou master carver Pine Taiapa as the most significant influence on his life as an artist and educator.[6] Adsett's role in the department was helping introduce the new Māori Arts in Schools programme.
In 1991, Adsett became a principal tutor at Tairawhiti Polytechnic in Gisborne, working in the Toihoukura School of Māori Visual Arts. He took over from Ivan Ehau, the founder of the school, who had died that year. Adsett was involved in formatting a wānanga arts direction for the progamme.[7] [8] [9]
In 2002, Adsett returned to Hawke's Bay, where he set up the Toimairangi School of Māori Visual Culture within Te Wānanga o Aotearoa in Hastings. He continues to work there as an adjunct professor.
In 2021 a major retrospective of Adsett's work was organised by Pātaka Art + Museum, curated by Reuben Friend.[10] The accompanying book contains essays by Friend, artists Elizabeth Ellis, Tina Kuckkahn and Robert Jahnke and curators / historians Nigel Borell and David Butts.[11]
Outside of his work in the education sector, Adsett's own artwork has been included in major art exhibitions. This includes: (1992) in Sydney, Australia; "Te Waka Toi" (1992-1994), which toured the United States; and "Toi tū Toi Ora" at Auckland Art Gallery.[12]
In 2024 Adsett’s 1978 painting Waipuna was included in the exhibition Stranieri Ovunque, Foreigners Everywhere curated by Adriano Pedrosa for the 60th international exhibition at the Venice Biennale. Other New Zealanders selected for the exhibition were: Brett Graham and Fred Graham, the Mataaho Collective and Selwyn Te Ngareatua Wilson.[13]
1986
1992
2003
2007
2011
2013
2020
2021
1985 Adsett won the Montana Lindauer Award with his painting Aue.[22] In the 2005 New Year Honours, Adsett was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to art.[23] [24] In 2014, Adsett was conferred an honorary doctorate by Massey University,[25] and he received Te Tohu o Te Papa Tongarewa Rongomaraeroa award in the 2018 Te Waka Toi Awards.[26]
In 2020, Adsett was named as an Arts Foundation of New Zealand Icon, an honour limited to 20 living New Zealanders.[2]
Adsett's work is held in public gallery collections throughout Aotearoa New Zealand, including: