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Essay
November 19, 2025

Untitled, Rock Pools

Few New Zealand artists have explored the meeting of land, sea and light with the clarity and contemplative precision of Michael Smither.

Emerging in the 1960s from Taranaki and later the Coromandel, Smither forged a painterly language rooted in realism yet charged with metaphysical resonance. His Rock Paintings stand among the most recognisable images in New Zealand art, compositions in which tide pools, rounded boulders and reflected skies become meditations on rhythm, form and the slow sculpting power of nature.

Painted in 1968, this major example captures Smither at the height of his early realist period. Rounded boulders sit in pools of tidal water, each element shaped with a sculptural understanding of weight, light and contour. The composition is still, but never static.

Smither's realism has never been solely observational. The rock pools offered a site where permanence and flux could coexist, ancient stone shaped by the transient movement of water and light. I wanted to paint permanence and flux together, he has reflected, an ambition that finds full voice in works such as this.

By the late 1960s and early 1970s, Smither's Rock Pool paintings had become icons of a distinctly New Zealand realism: intelligent, serene and uncompromising in detail. Examples from this period are held in the Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, the Govett-Brewster Art Gallery and major private collections nationwide. The present work exemplifies the discipline and stillness that secured Smither's place among our most enduring painters. His influence continues to extend across generations of painters and printmakers who recognise in his work both conceptual depth and technical mastery.