Mount Aspiring / Tititea (3, 033 m -9,951 ft)
New Zealand
Christchurh Art Gallery- Te Puna o Waiwhetu.
The mountain
Mount Aspiring / Tititea is New Zealand's highest mountain outside the Aoraki/Mount Cook region.
Set within Otago's Mount Aspiring National Park, it has a height of
3,033 metres (9,951 ft). Māori named it Tititea, which translates as
Glistening Peak. It was named in December 1857 by the Chief Surveyor for
the Otago Province, John Turnbull Thomson.[2] It is also often called
'the Matterhorn of the South,' for its pyramidal peak when seen from the
Matukituki River. The first ascent was on 23 November 1909 by Major
Bernard Head and guides Jack Clarke and Alec Graham.[3] Head's party
climbed to the summit ridge by the west face from the Bonar Glacier, a
route not repeated until 1965.
Mount Aspiring / Tititea sits slightly to the west of the main divide,
30 kilometres west of Lake Wanaka.[2] It lies at the junction of three
major glacial systems — the Bonar Glacier, which drains into the Waipara
River, and the Volta and Therma Glaciers, which both drain into the
Waitoto River. The Waipara is a tributary of the Arawhata River, and
both the Arawhata and Waitoto Rivers flow out to the west coast in
between Haast and Jackson Bay.
The painter
Laurence William Wilson emigrated
to Auckland in 1877 and then travelled extensively to settle in Dunedin
in 1884. He painted in both oils and watercolours, became a painting
companion of George O'Brien and a teacher. One of his pupils was the
Dunedin artist Alfred O'Keefe. In 1895, LW Wilson together with Grace
Joel, Alfred O'Keefe, Jane Wimperis and Girolami Nerli formed the Easel
Club , a breakaway from the Dunedin Establishment, which offered a
programme of special classes and the introduction of a professional lady
model for life drawing. In 1904 LW Wilson left Dunedin for Melbourne
where he spent 5 months on a commissioned painting of the city before he
set out for England, eventually returning to New Zealand via India and
Africa. He exhibited with the Canterbury Society of Arts in 1882 and the
Otago Art Society between 1994 and 1904. His work was included in the
NZ and South Seas Exhibition Dunedin 1889-90 and at the St Louis
Exposition in 1904. LW Wilson is represented in the collections of all
the major public galleries in New Zealand.
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2022 - Wandering Vertexes...
by Francis Rousseau