John Coley
John William Coley is a Christchurch painter and art critic. He was director of the Robert McDougall Art Gallery from 1981 to 1995.
Early life and art career
John William Coley was born in 1935 in Palmerston North. He went to Palmerston North Boys’ High School along with evening art classes at the city's Technical School. Coley's first job was as a cadet reporter on the Manawatu Evening Standard. In 1955 he was a student at the Canterbury College School of Art in Christchurch being taught by Russell Clark and Bill Sutton along with fellow students Ted Bracey, Pat Hanly, Gil Tavener, Ted Bullmore, Hamish Keith and Bill Culbert. During their time at the art school it moved from its city site to Ilam. Coley graduated in 1957 and went on to teach at Papanui High School and later in the art department of the Christchurch Teachers’ College. In 1959 Coley had his first solo exhibition at Gallery 91 the Christchurch Press art critic Nelson Kenny writing that Coley had ‘the gift of a colourist’ and a ‘good unforced feeling for paint.” Kenny added, ‘...it's a measure of Mr. Coley's talent that he is most successful in his larger paintings. It is a very skilful essay in the use of colours which few painters will attempt to use – orange and purple, the warmest and coolest colours.’ The following year he was invited to exhibit with The Group which he continued to do annually, with the exception of 1966 and 1968, until the last Group show in 1977. Coley received a Queen Elizabeth II Arts Council Grant in1964 and used it to visit the USA. On his return from the States Coley, along with a number of other young Canterbury artists he knew from student days, helped form 20/20 Vision. One project involved creating a set of artist prints commercially screen printed, an affront to the hand-made culture of printmaking at the time, and sold for only two dollars each. Artists that contributed to the series included Greer Twiss, Derek Mitchell, Don Peebles and Coley himself. In 1967 Coley painted the first of his Abacus series that would become his signature work. You can see an example of one of these paintings here at the Dunedin Public Art Gallery.The Robert McDougal Contemporary Art Annex
The Annex opened in 1988 in the Arts Centre that was formally University of Canterbury's town location. The programme was set out to focus on local and international touring exhibitions ‘with an emphasis on Canterbury Art’ In keeping with its name the opening exhibition Here and Now included the work of 12 emerging Canterbury artists Joanna Braithwaite, Gary Collins, William Dunning, Neil Frazer, Jason Greig, Linda James, Grant Lingard, Philip Price, Richard Reddaway, Grant Takle, Bianca van Rangelrooy and Tracey Wilson.Selected exhibitions
Coley has a long record of exhibitions as a painter and regularly showed in dealer galleries throughout New Zealand.- 1959 John Coley Gallery 91 Christchurch.
- 1960 First show with The Group.
- 1965 New Zealand Painting Auckland Art Gallery. Coley also showed in the 1961, 62 and 63 editions of this exhibition mounted by the Auckland Art Gallery.
- 1971 Recent Painting in Canterbury Robert McDougall Art Gallery
- 1973 Canterbury Confrontations Robert McDougall Art Gallery. Pan Pacific Arts Festival. Coley painted Leo Bensemann and Bensemann painted Coley.
- 1980 John Coley: Recent paintings CSA Gallery, Christchurch.
- 1995 About Town Robert McDougall Art Gallery, Christchurch.
- 1998 40 out of 40 Canterbury Painters 1958-1998 Robert McDougal Art Gallery, Christchurch.
Writing