When working with historic collections one often comes across items that are a mystery.
It becomes a balancing act between the time and resources required to conduct exhaustive research and learning to accept that in some cases we may never know the answers.
Within the Sarjeant collection is a group of six beautifully rendered botanical works by Charlotte Hardcastle (1828-1908). Little was previously known about Charlotte, or the circumstances under which her works entered the Sarjeant collection, and thanks to recent research by Professor Michele Leggott and her team at Auckland University we now know considerably more about this early New Zealand artist.
While the team were researching another early New Zealand artist, Emily Cumming Harris (1837-1925), it became apparent that the two women were acquainted and that Emily looked to the more experienced Charlotte as an artistic mentor who also provided tutelage on wood engraving while they both resided in Nelson.