Robert Macdonald - Watercolours

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Bathers - Mangawhai (2002)
Watercolour and crayon
600 x 690 mm (framed)
Bathers Mangawhai 1s
Taranaki Farm - Near Okato (2007)
Watercolour and crayon
825 x 1005 mm (framed)
Taranaki Farm Near Okato 5s
Farm Near Okato - Taranaki (1993/94)
Watercolour
580 x 760 mm (paper)
190215 RM Near Okato Taranakia
Huia Craggs (2008)
Watercolour and crayon
297 x 420 (paper)
190215 RM Huia Craggs 2008
Taranaki Gothic (2007)
Watercolour ink and crayon
420 x 590 x mm (paper)
Taranaki Gothic 4s

While living in Wales, Macdonald has always loved to paint scenes from New Zealand, and this can be seen in the works pictured above. His bright colours, and use of crayon and ink give the works a sense of fun and freedom, while capturing the essence of the places he obviously knows and loves.  Macdonald’s Welsh watercolours have won many awards, and in 2014 he became the first elected president of the Royal Watercolour Society of Wales . 

Born in 1935 in Spilsby, Lincolnshire, the bombing of Macdonald’s home during the war led to his family emigrating to New Zealand in 1945, settling in Ruawai (Kaipara Harbour), a mixed community of Maori and Pakeha.

With art studies out of reach, Macdonald trained as a reporter, before undertaking a period of service with the NZ army. He worked as a journalist at the New Zealand Herald until 1958, when he took a boat to Sydney, and then an Italian immigrant ship to Naples. Making his way to London, he visited the art schools, being accepted at the Central where he met John Drawbridge. Macdonald had early success in 1960 when one of his etchings was selected for a prestigious exhibition of 25 printmakers.

During the 1960’s, as finances dictated, he worked in Fleet St as a Commonwealth Correspondent. Continuing to paint in his spare time, six of his large Maori portraits were exhibited in New Zealand House, London in 1972. As Chief Diplomatic Correspondent In the 1970’s, he travelled widely with Britain’s Foreign Secretaries. He gave up this work in 1976 for postgraduate studies at the Royal College of Art. After three years there, he returned to the Central to take an advanced printmaking course.

With strong links to New Zealand, and empathy for the losses of the Maori, he accepted an invitation from Robert Mahuta (nephew of the Maori Queen) to take part in the Hikoi in 1984, helping to present Treaty demands to Parliament, and documenting their struggles in his book The Fifth Wind, which was illustrated with his own linocuts.

His prints have been exhibited widely in the UK and internationally in Brussels, Holland, USA, Germany, Pakistan and New Zealand, and are held in the Victoria & Albert Museum, London among other public collections. Macdonald is a director of the Swansea Printmaking Workshop.

See also Macdonald’s, AcrylicsEtchings, and Linocuts & Woodcuts