Among its prominent places, the Abel Tasman National Park, http://www.doc.govt.nz/parks-and-recreation/places-to-go/nelson-tasman/places/abel-tasman-national-park/ an unforgettable place that includes several kilometers of golden beaches. One of the most technologically developed countries in the world, New Zealand, is a land rich in natural wonders, long remained unknown to the West. Not only. Here you can also find some magnificent fruits of human creativity.
From 1895-96, FRANCES HODHKINS attended Dunedin School of Art. In Europe, she held her first solo show at the Paterson’s Gallery in London in 1907, then moved to Paris in 1908. She spent the rest of her life in Britain, because of World War II, continuing to paint into her seventies. She died in Dorchester, on a May day. Into the Auckland Art Gallery https://www.aucklandartgallery.com/page/the-paintings-and-drawings-by-frances-hodgkins you can discover paintings and drawings by Frances Hodgkins.
Its Te Awamutu Museum has a number of permanent exhibitions, focusing on the history of Te Awamutu. There is also an exhibition focusing on Tim and Neil Finn, brothers of the band Crowded House. Neil Finn was born in Te Awamutu. The town is located 30 km south, south from Auckland and Hamilton, in the North Island of New Zealand. Its main thoroughfare is Alexandra Street. Special restaurants? Located in the heart of Te Awamutu, Fahrenheit Restaurant & Bar http://www.fahrenheitrestaurant.co.nz/Menus you offers a la carte dining for lunch and dinner. The bar also offers a tapas menu to, while the outdoor balcony allows for dining overlooking the main street of Te Awamutu.
Crowded House https://www.crowdedhouse.com/store/ are a rock band formed in Melbourne, Australia, in 1985. The founding members were New Zealander Neil Finn and Australians Paul Hester and Nick Seymour. Later band members included Neil Finn’s brother, Tim Finn, and Mark Hart and Matt Sherrod. As of 2010, the group has sold 10 million albums.
Her paintings are clear and sharply-defined. RITA ANGUS was influenced by Byzantine and cubism art, and also by the English painter Christopher Perkins. One of the most famous of 1936′ paintings is “Cass”, in which she portrayed the bare emptiness of the Canterbury landscape, using forms and unblended colours in a style remiscent of poster art. She was born in Hastings. In the early 1950s she spent time travelling around New Zealand, where she painted her “Central Otago”.
Its oldest building is the 1858 Colonial Cottage in Mount Cook, while the tallest building is the Majestic Centre (on Willis Street at 116 metres high). Wellington it is at the south-western tip of the North Island (between Cook Strait and the Rimutaka Range). You can discover that this town it is the world’s windiest city. On Cable Street, a modernist building housing the Museum of New Zealand, the Te Papa Tongarewa. The annual children’s Artsplash Festival, here brings together of students from across the region, with music and dance performances and the presentation of visual arts. Among its notable people, you will have the opportunity to discover the poet Katherine Mansfield.
This town is home to Baldwin Street, the steepest street in the world. Archaeological evidence, points to the area having been inhabited by Māori, prior to the European arrival. Its urban area lies on the central-eastern coast of Otago, and Its name comes from Dùn Èideann (the Scottish Gaelic name for Edinburgh). The harbour and hills around Dunedin represent the remnants of an extinct volcano. Dunedin has a public art gallery, the Dunedin Public Art Gallery. If you like, there are also several more experimental art spaces (such as the Blue Oyster Gallery, in Dowling Street. On the Writers’ Walk (on the Octagon), you can discover the memorial plaque dedicated to Janet Frame.
Her celebrity derived from her dramatic personal history (as well as her literary career). NENE JANET PATERSON CLUTHA was born in a August day, 1924 in Dunedin (in the south-east of New Zealand’s South Island). She was a New Zealand author (under the name Janet Frame), that wrote novels and poetry. She left New Zealand in late 1956, lived and worked in Europe, with brief sojourns to Ibiza. In an effort to alleviate the ill effects of her years spent in psychiatric hospitals, she began therapy sessions. She died in Dunedin in 2004, shortly after becoming one of the first recipients of the New Zealand “Icon” award.
The intellectual property of the images that appear in this blog correspond to their authors. The sole purpose of this site, is to spread the knowledge of these artists and that other people enjoy their works. To pursue this issue, you can digit: http://meetingbenches.com/2018/02/inner-landscapes-new-zealand/
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