Mary McIntyre (artist)


Mary McIntyre is a New Zealand artist. Her works are included in major art collections in New Zealand and Australia.

Background

McIntyre was born in Auckland, New Zealand. She began painting while living and working in Waikato, where her husband was a farmer. In 1966 she attended an Elam School of Fine Arts Summer School in Auckland and was tutored by Colin McCahon. After the summer school she returned to Waikato, later moving to Hamilton, and then Auckland. She also traveled to London and Italy where she was exposed to the Italian Renaissance masters. She is primarily self-taught and became a full-time artist in 1980.

Career

McIntyre is known for her realist works in which she creates ambiguous, often surreal, narratives. Influenced by the style and composition of Northern Italian and Renaissance art, she became known in New Zealand as a realist figurative painter. Her landscapes take New Zealand as their subject, specifically the volcanoes of Auckland. She is also known for her portraits, frequently painting herself as the protagonist. Her works often challenge political correctness and contain barbed humour or shafts of discomfort.
Notable works include: An All New Zealand Enterprise 2 ; The Birth of Adonis, or Portrait of three prominent men, or The Kiwi cup of tea ; Moa summer.
Her works are included in the collections of the Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Waikato Museum of Art and History, James Wallace Arts Trust, and the National Museum of Australia.

Exhibitions

McIntyre has exhibited prolifically since the 1960s, contributing to more than fifty group shows and over thirty solo exhibitions including: