Ian George (artist)

Ian David George (1953–2016) was a New Zealand-born Cook Islands senior painter, carver, educator, and curator of Atiu and Rarotonga descent.[1][2][3]

Ian George
Born
Ian David George

1953
Rotorua, New Zealand
Died8 February 2016
Rotorua, New Zealand
NationalityNew Zealand, Cook Islands
Alma materUniversity of Auckland
Known forpainting, carving
SpouseKay George
ChildrenMīria George , David George

George was a founding member of the Cook Island Arts Association and a former chairperson of the Tautai Pacific Arts Trust, In 1988, George relocated to Rarotonga to explore his family's heritage in the Cook Islands and to re-establish the art department at Tereora College, a national college. George later returned to New Zealand in 1995 to oversee the art department at Hillary College.[4]

In 1998, he curated Paringa Ou, the first major exhibition of contemporary art by Cook Island artists residing in New Zealand, featuring artists such as Ani O'Neill, Sylvia Marsters, Mahiriki Tangaroa, Michel Tuffery, Jim Vivieaere, Ian George, and Kay George. The exhibition travelled to the National Museum in Fiji, and Cook Islands National Museum, as well as Fisher Gallery in Auckland, New Zealand.[5] The exhibition was sponsored by the New Zealand High Commission.[6]

In 2002, George graduated with Master of Fine Arts from Elam School of Fine Arts, University of Auckland, and in the same year, George returned permanently to Rarotonga to be a Visual Arts Adviser for the Cook Islands Ministry of Education and a lecturer at the Cook Islands Teachers College.[4]

In 2003, George also co-curated an exhibition named Te Ata Ou as a response to Paringa Ou. Te Ata Ou was exhibited in Christchurch to be part of the Pacific Arts Association Conference in Christchurch, New Zealand.[5]

Inside the New Zealand Parliament, the entrance to The Pacific Room is designed by George, and the wooden carving was carved by four carvers from the South Pacific, Ian George from Cook Islands, Fatu Feu'u from Samoa, Filipe Tohi from Tonga, and Palalagi Manetoa from Niue, about how Pacific peoples from those islands came to New Zealand and made the new country home.[7]

George and his wife Kay George, also a notable artist herself, ran an art gallery named The Art Studio, (now Beluga Cafe), in Arorangi.[8] their daughter Mīria George, is a New Zealand writer, producer and director.[9]

Director David George dedicated a full-length feature documentary 'Aka'ōu: Tātatau in the Cook Islands to his father Ian George, about a heavily-tattooed Englishman living in Rarotonga named Croc Coulter.[10]

George died in Rotorua, New Zealand, where he was also born.[2]

Selected exhibitions

  • 1995: Pacific Graffiti, Uxbridge Community Centre, Auckland New Zealand[3]
  • 1998: Paringa Ou, Fisher Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand[5]
  • 1998: Paringa Ou, Fiji Museum, Fiji[5]
  • 1998: Paringa Ou, Cook Islands National Museum, Rarotonga, Cook Islands[5]
  • 2003: Te Ata Ou, Pacific Arts Association Conference in Christchurch, New Zealand[5]
  • 2016: Divergence, Bergman Gallery, Rarotonga, Cook Islands[11]
  • 2020: Tatou 2, The Story of Us, Bergman Gallery, Rarotonga, Cook Islands[11]

References