
Artwork Information
Pat Hanly trained as a painter in Christchurch before departing New Zealand to live in England and Italy. Upon his return in 1962 after four years away, he settled in Auckland. His three European series shown at the Ikon Gallery, an early private-dealer gallery, were dramatic works that presaged his key concerns - relationships between women, men, and children; the necessity for a spiritual quality to life and the significance of ecology on both a personal and global level. Hanly has few illusions about New Zealand; it is growing up as a nation and he believes that artists have a strategic contribution to make: 'Painting and sculpture are not entertainments offered merely as a social indulgence . . . '. He further noted in his journal, a few months before beginning his Figures in Light series: 'Light, bright, pure, exciting, free, expansive painting must come, there is nothing else here yet'. The extreme character of Pacific light, with its ability to bleach out volumes and define sharp edges to colourful shapes, has always inspired Hanly. By searching for what it means to live and work as a painter, he has contributed much to the future of visual art in New Zealand; his work emanates a love of life and a determination to live with a spirit entirely devoid of cynicism and indifference. (from The Guide, 2001)
- Artist
- Pat Hanly
- Title
- Figures in light 17
- Production Date
- 1964
- Medium
- oil on canvas
- Dimensions
- 1276 x 927 mm
- Credit Line
- Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, gift of the Friends of the Auckland Art Gallery, 1964
- Accession No
- 1964/9/4
- Copyright
- Copying restrictions apply
- Department
- New Zealand Art
- Display Status
- Not on display
More by Pat Hanly (103)

Golden Age
1979

Who Am I
1973

New Order No.7
1962

Pacific Condition
1976
Explore Connections (3)

Women
1863 Artworks

Infants
146 Artworks

Love
127 Artworks