The Sarjeant Gallery Te Whare o Rehua Whanganui is the recent recipient of a generous gift from New Zealand artist Gretchen Albrecht CNZM, bringing the gallery's collection of her works completely up to date.
Albrecht, an abstract artist of international repute, gifted 25 lithographic prints to the gallery when she and her husband, James Ross, visited the Sarjeant in June. The gallery already held a strong selection of the artist's work but this dated up to only 2002.
"She noted that the survey of her work was incomplete so offered a very generous gift that made our holdings more comprehensive, and better told the story of her stylistic and technical development," Sarjeant Gallery director Greg Anderson said.
Albrecht is best known for her geometrical, abstract style and use of bold colour, but during her 50-plus years as an artist she has also produced figurative paintings, a watercolour series, prints and sculptures.
"In 1983, critic Wystan Curnow noted that she was one of relatively few New Zealand artists fully immersed in their own interpretation of a painted abstraction that had long been established overseas, but had never managed to take root in this country. Realism had previously been the dominant theme in New Zealand painting and Albrecht was one of the few whose work diverged from that style," Anderson said.