Michael Smither Painter (Published by Ron Sang);
One Man and the Sea - view on NZ on Screen;
Michael Smither compositions - SOUNZ;
Michael Smither - The Next Ten Years - DVD available for purchase
- 1939
born, New Plymouth, New Zealand - 1959
attended Elam School of Fine Arts, University of Auckland - 1961
first exhibits in Group 60 Show, New Plymouth - 1968
accepted for Benson & Hedges Art Award;
wins HC Richards Memorial Prize, Brisbane Art Gallery, Queensland - 1970
Frances Hodgkins Fellow, University of Otago, Dunedin - 1971
awarded ASPAC Fellowship to Japan - 1981
Founder member of TACO *(Taranaki Artist' Co-operative - 1983
Presents End of Time's Chimes, at Christchurch Arts Festival with Jamie Bull - 2004
CNZM (Companion of the said order) for services to art. - 2005
Michael Smither Painter (Published by Ron Sang) nominated for Montana Book Award. - 2006
City Gallery major touring survey exhibition - Michael Smither - The Wonder Years - 2010
Arts Foundation Award for Patronage donation from Gus & Irene Fisher
Biography
Michael Smither - Painter, printmaker composer and conservationistCNZM
David Eggleton, NZ Listener, January 22-28 2005 Vol 197 No 3376
During his long and prolific career Michael Smither has found continuing inspiration in his immediate environment. This has resulted in a large body of work that is synonymous with the New Zealand landscape and culture. He paints coastal and mountain landscapes, family and children, domestic objects and religious symbols.
Born in New Plymouth, Michael Smither was based there until his move to Auckland to attend Elam School of Fine Arts in 1959. He then returned to New Plymouth and spent the majority of the 1960s in the Taranaki region. Paintings of this period record his family life, his wife and children, the New Plymouth community and the landscape of the region. He has become particularly renowned for his paintings of Mount Taranaki and the Taranaki boulders from this period. Works at this time also draws on religious iconography and religious themes.
Michael then abandoned painting for a number of years to concentrate on musical theory and composition, exploring a system of harmonic relationships. He went on to apply harmonics to other visual observations, as he worked in graphics, theatre, prints, artists' books, murals. It was at this time that Michael became a active conservationalist. He investigated creative techniques of environmental protection by making a series of large beach sculptures designed to prevent the erosion of sand dunes along the New Plymouth coastline.
Michael has held many prestigious one-man shows in New Zealand and Australia and has been included in numerous group exhibitions. His paintings are held in numerable public collections including Auckland Art Gallery and Te Papa Tongarewa Museum of New Zealand. His work is also included in significant private collections throughout New Zealand and overseas.
Michael Smither now lives and works north of Whitianga on the Coromandel Peninsula.









