Artist’s Back to Basic – July 2019

(Martin Jones) #1

be better off to accept what I have
done as part of the immediacy of
the artistic encounter. I guess, in the
end, it is the artist who must decide.


THE OVERALL PROCESS
I suspect that my approach to
painting is tempered by my life’s
experiences of having witnessed


most forms of human suffering


  • from the mutilations of a war
    zone to the distress of patients
    with terminal illnesses. Therefore, I
    see my art as a celebration of the
    beauty of my environment and, at
    times, of man’s intrusion into it.
    Although intellectual and emotional
    engagement are important ingredients


FOR YOUR INFFOR YOUR INFOO


About the Author
John Gillies was born in Christchurch,
New Zealand. He was educated at St
Andrew’s College, Christchurch; and
served with the Combined Services
Medical Team and the First Australian
Logistic Support Group in South Vietnam
from December 1969 to February


  1. He graduated MB, ChB in 1971
    and qualified Physician, FRACP in

  2. In 2007, he retired as Specialist
    Physician and Clinical Director of
    Respiratory Medicine for the Canterbury
    District Health Board – to become a
    full-time artist and portrait painter.
    John studied figure drawing under
    sculptor Tom Taylor as a preparatory
    school student, and developed a
    special interest in portrait painting
    under Tom Field as a secondary school
    student. He studied human anatomy
    by cadaver dissection as a medical
    student at the Otago University Medical
    School in Dunedin, New Zealand.
    This artist’s work has been widely
    exhibited. He supplies galleries
    including Merivale Fine Arts in
    Christchurch, Novo Gallery in
    Dunedin, Saffron Gallery in Timaru,
    and Rutherford Gallery in Nelson.
    He has done portrait commissions for
    Arthur Barnett’s (Dunedin), University
    of Otago Medical School (Dunedin),
    St Andrew’s College (Christchurch),
    The Christchurch Hospital, The
    Princess Margaret Hospital
    (Christchurch), The Christchurch
    Clinical School of Medicine, and
    The Isaac Theatre Royal Trust.
    In 2008, the artist published the book
    ‘In My Chair’ – a collection of 60
    portraits of prominent Cantabrians,
    featuring biographies by David McPhail
    and an introduction by David McPhail
    and Jon Gadsby. He also published
    a CD calendar for 2010 – featuring
    scenes of Canterbury cricket.
    He has received awards including the
    Telecom Art Award, highly commended,
    in 1992; the New Zealand Wearable
    Art Award, creative excellence, in 1998;
    and the Montana World of Wearable
    Art Award, section winner, in 2005.


Murray Crawfurd

Nan Grant
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