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Alfred Henry O'KeeffeBendigo Victoria
Alfred Henry O'Keeffe (21 July 1858 - 27 July 1941), New Zealand artist and art teacher. O'Keeffe occupies something of a unique place in New Zealand art history. During the first quarter of the twentieth century, he was one of the few New Zealand artists to engage with modernist ideas while actually remaining in New Zealand. At this time the majority of advanced New Zealand artists were expatriates, such as Frances Hodgkins.
O'Keeffe was born in Sandhurst (Bendigo), Victoria Australia in 1858. By c.1865 he and his family had moved to Dunedin, New Zealand. O'Keeffe studied at the Dunedin School of Art c.1882-86 and later at the Academie Julian in Paris (1894-95). He started exhibiting at the Otago Art Society in 1886, although also exhibited with the Canterbury Society of Arts, New Zealand Academy of Fine Arts, Auckland Society of Arts and Wanganui Society of Arts and Crafts. The financial demands of providing for his wife and five children meant O'Keeffe could not always afford to work as a full time artist. Before going to Paris he managed the Liverpool Arms Hotel in Dunedin, and after his return from 1895-1905 he ran the Outram Hotel. He also supplemented his income by teaching art. While living at Outram he took private classes in Dunedin, walking the 14 miles between the two. He taught at the Dunedin School of Art from 1912 until its temporary disestablishment in 1920. In the early 1920s he taught at the 'Barn Studio' with Mabel Hill. Three of O'Keeffe's five children predeceased him. Both his sons were killed in 1915 at Gallipoli. This experience is commemorated in his most famous painting The Defence Minister's Telegram (1921, Dunedin Public Art Gallery), which shows an elderly man receiving news of his son's death. One of his daughters died in 1917. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Henry_O%27Keeffe |