Steve Rumsey

Name
Steve Rumsey
Date of birth
09 Jul 1928
Place of birth
Brisbane/Queensland/Australia
Date of death
27 Aug 2011
Gender
Male
Biography
Steve Rumsey was a distinctive voice in mid-twentieth-century New Zealand photography, developing an abstract language that challenged the Pictorialism of the Camera Club movement. Active from 1948 to 1964, he drew on his early training at the Elam School of Art and on scientific studies at Auckland University, where his interest in natural form and structure shaped his investigative approach to image-making. Encouraged by mentors such as Graham Turbott and inspired by the modernism of Frank Hofmann and the Bauhaus ideas introduced by Theo Schoon, Rumsey pursued the idea of ‘photographing ideas’ rather than pursuing interesting subjects. Works such as Infinity, 1949, Test Strip Design, 1952, and Man on Ramp, 1952, exemplify his commitment to abstraction, while portraits, including one of painter Michael Illingworth, reveal Rumsey’s sensitivity to the lives of artists and their creative environments. Reassessed in the 2000s, Rumsey is now recognised for expanding the possibilities of photographic expression in mid-century Aotearoa.