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Laureate Award
Neil Dawson
Neil Dawson
CNZM
Sculptor
  • Neil Dawson
  • Biography
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Related links

View Neil Dawson's website
Jonathan Smart Gallery Christchurch
Milford Galleries  Auckland
Ferns - a guide to the sculpture in Civic Square, Wellington
Neil exhibits Pulse at Page Blackie Gallery , Wellington
Horizons , the Gibb's farm

Milestones
  • 1948   
    Born, Christchurch, New Zealand
  • 1970   
    Diploma of Fine Arts (Hons) - Canterbury University
  • 1973   
    Diploma in Sculpture - Victorian College of the Arts, Melbourne
  • 1975 -1983     
    Taught drawing and design at Christchurch Polytechnic
  • 1979   
    Seascape
    first installation - Robert McDougall Art Gallery
  • 1989  
    Created first suspended sphere, Globe, for Magiciens de la Terre, Pompidou Centre, Paris.
  • 2000  
    Commissioned by Olympic Co-ordination Authority to produce artwork for Sydney Olympic Games
  • 2003   
    Arts Foundation Laureate Award recipient
  • 2004
    Companion of the NZ Order of Merit
  • 2005   
    Completed first major outdoor works in the UK.
  • 2006
    Invited artist programme Antarctica, New Zealand

Biography

Neil Dawson - Sculptor
CNZM

Neil describes his work as "an obsession, like it is for the majority of artists," adding that he "continue[s] to be excited by new projects." In the 1998 catalogue for Ferns, Jim and Mary Barr say his work offers a "multiplicity of views that people can create for themselves as they move beneath or around his sculptures," emphasising that while "Dawson has used the interplay of the constant and the serendipitous in many of his works, in the spheres the combination has proved inspiring."

Born in Christchurch in 1948, Neil holds a Diploma of Fine Arts (Hons) from Canterbury University and a Graduate Diploma in Sculpture from the Victorian College of the Arts in Melbourne. Since his earliest installation in 1979 for the Robert McDougall Art Gallery, Seascape, he has gone on to compile an impressive portfolio of works held both in New Zealand and overseas.

Neil's career, to date, has focused on the production of large-scale, and site-specific, sculptures in New Zealand, Australia and Asia. He is best known for his suspended sculptures, the first of which was Echo in 1981. In 1989, he created his first suspended sphere, Globe, for the exhibition Magiciens de la Terre at the Pompidou Centre in Paris. Neil went on to use the basic form of the suspended sphere in several more works, most notably Ferns, installed in Wellington's Civic Square in 1998 as one of his now five suspended sculptures in the capital. He was also commissioned by the Olympic Co-ordination Authority to produce an artwork for the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, the result of which was Feathers and Skies, situated above the main entrance to Stadium Australia. In his hometown of Christchurch he is perhaps best known for Chalice, an 18m-high conical structure installed in Cathedral Square in 2001.

Neil was the recipient of an Arts Foundation Laureate Award in 2003.   The Laureate Award is an investment in excellence across a range of art forms for an artist with prominence and outstanding potential for future growth. Their work is rich but their richest work still lies ahead of them. The Award recognises a moment in the artists' career that will allow them to have their next great success. 

In 2005 and 2006 Neil completed his first major outdoor works in the United Kingdom with the installation of Raindrops and Wellsphere in Manchester. In  recent years Neil has returned to making smaller scale works.

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