New Zealand Institute of Architects

NZIA, New Zealand Institute of Architects Incorporated

Incorporated by an Act in 1913, although its "Journal of proceedings" was issued from 1912. The group named Society of Architects of New Zealand decided to join the Institute in 1913 (see New Zealand Institute of Architects "Journal of proceedings", volume 2 number 1, October 1913, pp25ff).

There are 48 related items to this topic
Image

[Lodge, Nevile Sidney] 1918-1989 :S. C.[sic] Chaplin, A.N.Z.I.A. 1947.

Date: 1947

By: Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989; Moult, Eric Edwin, 1908-1995

Reference: A-279-047

Description: Three-quarter portrait of architect Sidney George Chaplin. Title from inscription below image. Previous group title used in Accessions Register Book: Twelve architects; caricatures by Nevile Sidney Lodge. 1947. Inscriptions: Recto - beneath image - [Title]; Recto - bottom right - Nevile/Lodge/47; Verso - bottom centre - (Stamp): McGregor Wright's / Picture Framers and Art Dealers One of a set of 12 caricatures of New Zealand architects commissioned in 1947 by the General Manager, Briscoe E. W. Mills & Co. Ltd, to hang in company boardroom (See A-279-037/048). Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Airbrush caricature on board, 305 x 254 mm. Provenance: Purchased from Mr E. E. Moult, Wellington, in 1991. Originally commissioned in 1947 by the General Manager of Briscoe E.W. Mills & Co. Ltd, to hang in company boardroom, in Victoria Strreet, Wellington; relocated in early 1950s to Hardware Manager's office; on relocation of company offices in 1954, salvaged by vendor Mr E.E. Moult, then employed at Briscoe's. Exhibited in Bank of New Zealand foyer 7-18 August 1989 in conjunction with NZIA Biennial Conference, 10-13 August 1989: "Identikit Cities - Wellington and the wider world".

Image

[Posters advertising exhibitions of photographers, photographs and photography. 1981. F...

Date: 1981

Reference: Eph-C-PHOTO-EXHIBITION-1981-1

Description: Includes: Black Power, Christchurch. Photographs by Glenn Jowitt. Photo-Forum Gallery, Wellington, 27th April to 9th May 1981. By Eight. Adams, Brett, Brownson, Burke, Gillespie, Ginn, Hannken, Lloyd. Photographs at the Auckland Society of Arts, Sept 21 - Oct 2, 1981. Clare Fergusson. July 20 - Aug 7, Real Pictures Gallery, exhibition of photographs. 23 - 24 July, 100m2, "My Grandmother" performance. 25 July, Auckland City Art Gallery, slide-film-talk. 25 July, Real Pictures Gallery, "Date Day" performance. (2 copies). From the Road, fifty South Island photographs by Robin Morrison. An exhibition organised by the Auckland City Art Gallery toured by the New Zealand Art Gallery Directors Council. In a Different Light, [Photographs by] Nick Servian, Geoff Mason, Brian Enting. An Exhibition commencing 19th July. The Lewis-Paape Gallery [Lower Hutt]. Frame Ups; and exhibition of photographs [by] Mary Macpherson [and] Martin Taylor. PhotoForum Gallery [Wellington] 2 - 20 June 1981 (2 copies). New Zealand Architecture, a photographic survey. New Zealand Institute of Architects: City Art Gallery, Wellington. (2 copies). Photos, Peter Hannken. April 27 - May 15 1981, Real Pictures Gallery, Auckland. (4 copies). Points of View. Reg Feuz, Peter Butler, Janet McCallum, Peter Black, Brian Davis, Tony Kellaway. PhotoForum Gallery, Wellington. Project 3-D; an exhibition of holography and stereoscopic photography. Robert McDougall Art Gallery, Christchurch, February 18 to March 22, 1981. Plus specimen sheet `View' - Laurence Aberhart, plus original prints: 1980s-90s [by] Bragg, Gibbs, Foelsch. October 20 - 31st 1981, PhotoForum Gallery [Wellington]. Visions-Realities; three contemporary German photographers - Wolf Harhammer, Reinold Hilgering, Rolf Rettenberger. PhotoForum Gallery, 26 Harris Street, Wellington, 10-28 March 1981. We're Moving Now; photographs by Cathryn Shine, 1st-19th September, 1981, PhotoForum Gallery, Wellington. (2 copies). Quantity: 6 colour photo-mechanical print(s). 7 b&w photo-mechanical print(s). Physical Description: Photolithographs on posters, sizes varying up to 500 x 350 mm. Provenance: Donated at various times.

Audio

Interview with Errol Care-Cottrell

Date: 25 Feb 1999

From: `Back to the drawing board' - Hamilton architects oral history project

By: Care-Cottrell, Errol, 1919-2000; Downs, Jeff, active 1995

Reference: OHInt-0483-02

Description: Errol Care-Cottrell was born in Richmond in 1919. Recalls working for State Advances Corporation in Auckland in 1938 and doing part-time architectural study at Auckland University. Describes the outbreak of World War II and being in the infantry in the Middle East as a member of the 22nd Battalion in Egypt and Libya in 1941. Discusses being taken a prisoner of war (POW) by the Germans, spending time imprisoned in Benghazi and labouring as a POW in Italy, Germany and Czechoslovakia. Talks about his return to New Zealand, getting a rehabilitation bursary to finish his architectural study and working with Frank Anderson in Hamilton in the holidays. Describes qualifying as an architect and working for the Ministry of Works in Wellington, King, Cook and Dawson in Hamilton, and White, Leigh and de Lisle. Explains his decision to set up his own practice, the architectural registration system, getting his first job, the process of being architect for a house and working with a client. Discusses function and aesthetics in a building. Talks about having staff and taking a business partner, Jerome Pickering, in 1977. Discusses buildings he has worked on including service stations, banks, schools and offices. Comments on changes to Hamilton city, draugtsmen calling themselves architects, being the Bay of Plenty chair for the New Zealand Institute of Architects and working for the Historic Places Trust to save some buildings. Mentions marrying in 1950. Interviewer(s) - Jeff Downs Accompanying material - List of architectural projects completed; post-interview notes Quantity: 2 C60 cassette(s). 1 printed abstract(s). 1 interview(s). 2 Hours Duration. Finding Aids: Abstract Available - abstracting complete OHA-3093.

Audio

Interview with Ted Hill

Date: 29 Mar, 9,14,21,28 Apr, 30 Jun 1999 - 29 Mar 1999 - 30 Jun 1999

From: `Back to the drawing board' - Hamilton architects oral history project

By: Hill, Arthur Edward, 1920-2007

Reference: OHInt-0483-08

Description: Ted Hill was born in Birmingham, England in 1920. Recalls his mother's death when he was six years old and several housekeepers. Describes being interested in singing and painting as a child and leaving school at the age of fourteen. Describes his father's death from an accident when he was sixteen. Talks about working for an accounting firm and then for his uncle's building business where he learnt about drawing, buildings and surveying. Discusses joining the army in 1940, being accepted for officer training and going to the north west frontier of India. Gives a detailed description of his time in India, becoming a parachutist, and being sent to Imphal where the Japanese were driven out. Recalls rethinking his direction after the war and doing a course in architecture at Art School in Birmingham. Describes the battle between classical and modern architecture at the time. Recalls his first job in Birmingham and a subsequent job in London. Mentions marriage and divorce before coming to New Zealand in 1958. Recalls Ministry of Works architects Frank Stewart, Gordon Wilson, Warwick Keen, Neville Burren, Jock Beere and the `Tomato House' in Wellington. Recalls his first job on an office accommodation block and doing working drawings for the Government Print Office. Discusses the role of Ned Blake Kelly in this project. Recalls the design and requirements for the Vogel building, interaction with Frank Shephard and problems with the building. Discusses architectural training and design. Recalls taking a leading role in problems with working conditions for architects. Describes wanting to move to a smaller town, living and working in Wanganui then moving to Cambridge and working in the Ministry of Works at Hamilton. Discusses opposing the Ministry of Works scheme for a Cambridge bypass. Talks about the design of the Hamilton police station. Comments on architects Michael Graves and Geoff Mardon. Discusses work for the University of Waikato. Mentions site difficulties and gives details of design and schedules. Talks about the construction of four science blocks by Street Construction. Comments on the university lakes, the Lady Goodfellow Chapel and the Library building. Discusses the Ministry of Works goal of creating sound buildings with a minimum of maintenance. Discusses the Huntly power station, the Performing Arts Centre and the courthouse. Discusses the influence of the client on the architectural process. Comments on the local branch of the New Zealand Institute of Architects. Lists awards achieved by Hamilton Ministry of Works architects. One tape is a commentary made while walking through the grounds of the University of Waikato. Interviewer(s) - Athol Attwood Quantity: 12 C60 cassette(s). 1 printed abstract(s). 1 interview(s). 12 Hours Duration. Finding Aids: Abstract Available - abstracting complete OHA-3099.

Audio

Interview with Vic Procuta

Date: 29 Apr 1998

From: `Back to the drawing board' - Hamilton architects oral history project

By: Procuta, Vaclovas Viktoras, 1929-; Kellaway, Laura Liane, 1965-

Reference: OHInt-0483-14

Description: Vic Procuta was born in Lithuania in 1929. Describes how his father was an army officer and his mother a dressmaker. Discusses the role of his grandparents in his upbringing. Talks about living in the old city of Vilnius and his love of its architecture. Describes the political `benevolent dictatorship' of the 1930s in Lithuania. Discusses the effect on the country of being between Germany and Russia. Recalls the German occupation while he was in high school and the German retreat from the Russians in 1944. Describes how his family left Vilnius in a convoy with other army families, crossed into Germany, saw the bombardment of Dresden, and went to Speigelau on the German-Czechoslovak border. Mentions that his father left and was later returned to the family with tuberculosis and died. Describes being taken over by American troops in 1945. Describes the acceptance of his family for immigration to New Zealand in 1947 and being sent to the Pahiatua camp. Discusses their three months there before being sent to Dunedin, working in a clothing factory and as a draughtsman for the Otago Education Board. Comments on Dunedin. Describes assistance from architects John Fathers and Ted McCoy and advice to go to the School of Architecture rather than undertake long-term extramural study. Describes the family's move to Auckland. Mentions Vernon Brown, a lecturer at the School of Architecture. Discusses moving to Whangarei after studying architecture and working for Ray Woolford and Ron Smith. Describes returning to Auckland and working with Steve Vilicich on restaurant alterations in 1957-1958. Mentions the Clevelands Hotel. Describes abandoning his architectural thesis. Mentions Professor Dick Toy. Talks about moving to Hamilton and doing hospital design for Frank Gillman and David Sayers, briefly working for the South Auckland Education Board then moving to the United States. Describes living in Wisconsin and resitting exams to qualify for architectural registration. Comments on the United States in the 1960s. Describes the work of Frank Lloyd Wright, his impact and his personality. Talks about the family's decision to return to New Zealand in 1967 for financial reasons, the need to get a re-entry permit and settling in Wanganui. Describes shifting to Hamilton and working for the South Auckland Education Board. Discusses his lack of practical knowledge and assistance given by Noel Earls. Discusses the Building Code used by the Education Board. Recalls his work on secondary schools. Recalls working with Warwick Kellaway on the open plan concept of classrooms at Deanwell and its wider application. Describes the use of relocatable classrooms and their flexibility. Comments on the industrial growth of Turangi, Tokoroa and Putaruru, the need for extra classrooms and being flooded with work in the 1970s and 1980s. Discusses the Waikato-Bay of Plenty branch of the New Zealand Institute of Architects and some of their conferences. Talks about Hamilton architects and their failure to speak up more against the Council. Mentions some of the architects' wives as being more actively involved. Comments on the failure to utilise the river in town planning. Describes the work of Warwick Kellaway in preserving local architecture. Comments on the design work of Doug Angus and Bernie Ray (Rae). Mentions working with Steve Mrkusic and others in Five Plus One Architects when the Education Boards were disbanded in 1989. Describes going into business on his own. Comments on the expectations of clients. Mentions some of the local women architects including Laura Kellaway, Ros Empson, Jane-Lee Smith and Wendy Moody. Interviewer(s) - Laura Kellaway Quantity: 5 C60 cassette(s). 1 printed abstract(s). 1 interview(s). 5 Hours Duration. Finding Aids: Abstract Available - abstracting complete OHA-3105.

Audio

Interview with David Sayers

Date: 4,5 Apr 1999 - 04 Apr 1999 - 05 Apr 1999

From: `Back to the drawing board' - Hamilton architects oral history project

By: Sayers, David Alan, 1931-2012; Corcoran, Fiona, active 1999

Reference: OHInt-0483-15

Description: David Sayers was born in Surrey, England in 1931. Describes how his father was an interior designer and his mother was a draughtswoman. Mentions the encouragement of his art teacher and sponsorship to the Architectural Association School of Architecture. Talks about visiting lecturers including Frank Lloyd Wright. Discusses working for a New Zealand architect in England, Reg Uren, his influence and suggestion that David Sayers work in New Zealand. Mentions his marriage in 1953. Mentions that Reg Uren later returned to live in New Zealand. Describes coming to New Zealand and being met in Wellington by Public Works Department architects Jack Wight and Frank Turner. Mentions Jock Beere and Gordon Wilson. Recalls the `Tomato House', a `temporary' World War I building still used by the Ministry of Works in the 1960s. Describes living at Rongotai until the construction of the airport. Talks about going to Hamilton to work for Frank Gillman, previously in business with his father E.E. Gillman, and then in partnership with Doug Angus and Paul Marks. Describes the growth of the firm, as the result of work on the Tauranga Hospital and for the Waikato Hospital Board, which became Gillman, Garry, Clapp and Sayers on amalgamation with Peter (Ian) Garry and Rex Clapp. Mentions work for the New Zealand Co-operative Dairy Company. Comments on the New Zealand Institute of Architects (NZIA) fixed fee structure. Mentions his role in developing a computerised coding system for contract documentation. Discusses the impact of the university on the town of Hamilton and a seminar on the development of the city. Talks about work in Rarotonga in projects funded by New Zealand aid and in Papua New Guinea, Fiji and the Solomon Islands. Describes a request by WHO to assist on a book on the planning of district hospitals. Mentions that the firm opened a branch in Palmerston North and later in Auckland as a result of extensive hospital work in both areas. Describes also working for Nelson, Wairau and Northland Hospital Boards. Comments on working for the Department of Health and hospital boards. Discusses current health service provision in New Zealand. Mentions work for the Waikato Polytechnic and on buildings for the kiwifruit industry. Describes going to London and hiring six architects. Comments on change in the firm as the result of rapid growth and not wanting to do management work. Mentions that there were fourteen partners in the firm which became Gillman Partners. Describes how they bought a dairy farm at Katikati. Recalls the work of Kelvin Prince who did sun frame printing for the firm. Describes retirement between 1982 and 1984 and the amalgamation of Gillman Partners with Worleys. Discusses his involvement in the kiwifruit industry and the production of organic kiwifruit under the Biogro label. Describes the decision by the Kiwifruit Authority to ban the export of organic kiwifruit, fighting this decision and the costs involved. Describes selling the orchard to DFC and his disillusionment with the planning process. Comments on planning in terms of architecture. Describes working on his family property and writing novels and poetry. Interviewer(s) - Fiona Corcoran Quantity: 5 C60 cassette(s). 1 printed abstract(s). 1 interview(s). 5 Hours Duration. Finding Aids: Abstract Available - abstracting complete OHA-3106.

Image

Cockcroft, R J :Interior of the Terrace Congregational Church. July, 1953.

Date: 1953

By: Cockcroft, Richard John, 1931-2005; New Zealand Institute of Architects

Reference: Plans-80-2271

Description: A measured drawing of the interior including details, done as part of architectural training Quantity: 1 plan(s). Physical Description: Diazo print, 320 x 449 mm

Image

[Ephemera relating to architecture. 1970-1989]

Date: 1970 - 1989

From: [Ephemera of quarto size relating to architecture, architects and architectural design in New Zealand]

Reference: Eph-B-ARCHITECTURE-1970/1980s

Description: Includes: 1977: Architectural Association Auckland / Monier Design Awards for 1977 1982: National measured drawing competition. Application form 1982?: NZ Institute of Architects. Architecture (vocational advice). ca 1982 1983: New Zealand Institute of Architects. Architectural competitions. Methods and guidelines pamphlet 1983: The architect exposed; an exhibition of architectural drawings. Wellington City Art Gallery, 20 August - 18 September 1983. Catalogue 1984: Hawkes Bay Art Gallery & Museum. Art Deco in Hawkes Bay. Exhibition, 11 December 1983- 10 September 1984. Catalogue (2 copies) 1985: Gooch Mitchell & Macdiarmid. Blank certificate with letterhead 1989: Forgan Jones Company Ltd. Tray-dec 300; small structures design. April 1989 1989: Unbuilt Wellington; an exhibition of unrealised visions for Wellington City 1940-1990, presented in association with The Architectural Centre (Inc). Wellington City Art Gallery, 12 August - 5 November 1989. Pamphlet, overall catalogue, and sheets 1, 3, 4 and 5 Other location headings with similar material: BUILDING, BUILDINGS:[Location], HOUSING Quantity: 1 folder(s). Physical Description: Photolithographs, sizes varying up to 330 mm.

Image

[Ephemera relating to architecture. 1990-1999]

Date: 1990 - 1999

From: [Ephemera of quarto size relating to architecture, architects and architectural design in New Zealand]

Reference: Eph-B-ARCHITECTURE-1990s

Description: Partial contents: 1991: New Zealand Institute of Architects biennial conference. Architecture at the edge. Aotea centre, Auckland New Zealand, 7-10 November 1991. Programme and registration booklet 1992: University of Auckland. Architects Business Unit (ABU) [Information pamphlet] "Making a home; computer applications in practice"; a public seminar [with Michael Donn], 2 February 1992. Flier 1993: Architecture celebration. Focus, create, sustain. Taupo, 30 September - 2 October 1993. 1994: Derek J Wilson, Curriculum vitae, July 1994. Flier Houses built of earth; a slide illustrated talk on historical earthbuilidng from around the world ..., by Andrew Alcorn and Jenny Christie. School of Architecture, 17 November [1994]. Flier 1995: Jean Nouvel; recent architectural projects. City Gallery Wellington, 4 March - 7 May 1995. Catalogue 1996: "Cuttings from the Centre"; the Architectural Centre celebrates fifty years 1946-1996. City Gallery Wellington, 16 November 1996 - 2 March 1997. Pamphlet Lambton Harbour; realities and dreams, with John Gray, Helen Tippett. Centre for Continuing Education course, 5-19 August [1996]. Flier 1998: Architectural drawings by William Gray Young, by Paul Walker, School of Architecture, Victoria University of Wellington. [Flier of biographical notes] Other location headings with similar material: BUILDING, BUILDINGS:[Location], HOUSING Quantity: 1 folder(s). Physical Description: Photolithographs, sizes varying up to 330 mm.

Image

Svensden, Trevor Ronald, d 1993 :[Field notes for measured drawings for B. W. Mountfort...

Date: 1951

By: Svendsen, Trevor Ronald, 1926-1993; Hay, Christopher John, 1930-1997; New Zealand Institute of Architects

Reference: A-166-013/035

Description: Show Terrace Congregational Church, Wellington cf Chris Hall's similar drawings (A-166-036/064) and Chris Hall's measured drawing at Plans-80-880.) For 2nd year study for N.Z. Institute of Architects Quantity: 22 drawing(s). Physical Description: Ink and Pencil on 24 sheets 140 x 100 mm to 330 x 200 mm Transfers: Accompanying photographs were transferred to Photo Archive, 1979?.

Manuscript

Papers re Wharenui (a)

Date: 1966

From: Jones, Pei Te Hurinui, 1898-1976 : Papers

Reference: MS-Papers-5220-024

Description: Contains a contract between architects and Ngati Tuwharetoa on building the wharenui 'Pukawa' Quantity: 1 folder(s). Physical Description: Typescript

Audio

New Zealand Institute of Architects: Oral History Project

Date: 1995 - 2003

By: New Zealand Institute of Architects; Beard, James Albert, 1924-2017; Beere, Douglas Jocelyn, 1913-2001; Gabites, Allott Lorimer, 1919-2004; Gates, John, 1928-; Hill, Perry Martin, 1926-2005; Martin, Lewis Edouard, 1920-2013; Orchiston, Bruce Elwyn, 1914-2005; Tippett, Helen, 1933-; Wilson, Derek John, 1922-2016

Reference: OHColl-0413

Description: An ongoing project of life history interviews with Wellington architects. Interviewees are Douglas Beere, Allott Gabites, Martin Hill, Lewis Martin, Bruce Orchiston, Derek Wilson, Helen Tippett, Maurice Tebbs, John Gates and James (Jim) Beard. Sponsored by - New Zealand Institute of Architects, Wellington Branch Interviewer(s) - Jerome Cvitanovich, Joanne Aitken and Susan Fowke. Accompanying material - Project report for the latter part of the project:- the interviews with Derek Wilson and Allott Gabites. Gives background to this part of the project. Quantity: 16 C60 cassette(s). 8 printed abstract(s). 8 interview(s). 11 audiocassette(s). Finding Aids: Abstract Available - abstracting complete.

Manuscript

Correspondence - New Zealand Institute of Architects

Date: 1939-1942

From: Daniell, Frederick Charles, 1879-1953 : Papers

Reference: MS-Papers-3763-4/2/45

Description: Quantity: 1 folder(s).

Audio

Interview with Lewis Martin

Date: 1 May 1998 - 01 May 1998

From: New Zealand Institute of Architects: Oral History Project

By: Martin, Lewis Edouard, 1920-2013

Reference: OHInt-0413/6

Description: Lewis Edouard (Lew) Martin born Napier. Outlines family background - father, Francis White Martin was born in Fiji and became a Methodist minister and later an Anglican priest. Mother, Florence Bertha Williams was the first music graduate in New Zealand and was organist at St Matthew's Church in Auckland. Refers to Tobias Mattey (?). Gives location of childhood home in Napier and recalls events on day of Napier Earthquake. Briefly describes pre earthquake architecture in Napier and aftermath of earthquake and rebuilding process. Describes damage to home and aftershocks. Recalls decision to become an architect. Lists some of the buildings designed by Walter Finch. Discusses Le Corbusier. Describes holiday work and early employment with firms such as Massey Beatson Rix-Trott & Carter, with reference to houses and ammunition factories in Mount Eden and Hamilton and Septus Memorial on Petone waterfront designed by Horace Massey. Discusses World War II Service with Fleet Air Arm and recalls flying in Swordfish and Grumman Avengers from fleet carrier in Pacific. Describes circumstances leading to acceptance into Architects Association School (London) after the war and winning the Thames Valley Plywood Scholarship. Recalls return to New Zealand and jobs with Grey Young Morton & Calder; Al Gabites and Maurice Patience and offer of partnership from George Porter. Refers to Porter's involvement in starting the Architectural Centre and his standing for Wellington City Council in the early 1960s. Discusses architectural trends, with reference to `Architectural Review' and describes impact of work of Athfield and Walker. Outlines involvement in building alterations to Grey Hospital and principles of hospital design. Mentions Inangahua earthquake (1968) and recalls journey to West Coast on day of earthquake. Describes tour of the damage at the hospital and affect of earthquake on contracts. Also discusses work on Masterton Hospital, Government Life Insurance Buildings, State Housing and involvement with NZIA (New Zealand Institute of Architects). Details background to decision to build a Parliament extension, with reference to John Beaglehole. Backgrounds involvement of Basil Spence (British Architect). Recalls retirement in 1993 and refers to publishing three books of drawings. Sums up strengths and weaknesses. Interviewer(s) - Jerome Cvitanovich Arrangement: Tape numbers - OHC-007957-007960; OHLC-004074-004077 Quantity: 4 C60 cassette(s). 1 printed abstract(s). 4 Hours Duration. Finding Aids: Abstract Available - abstracting complete OHA-2158.

Other

Awards

Date: 24 September 1999 - 20 November 2003

From: Downstage Theatre Company (Wellington) : Records

Reference: fMS-Papers-12032

Description: 'Highly Commended' award for 'Graphic Design - Communication Graphics' presented to New Colenso Design Company, on behalf of the client Downstage Theatre, awarded 24 September 1999. Also the NZIA Resene Local Award for Architecture presented to James Beard and Co in the category of Enduring Architecture for Hannah Playhouse (1973), dated 20 November 2003. Quantity: 1 folder(s).

Manuscript

Inward and outward correspondence (A-Mc)

Date: [1970-1990]

From: Hamilton, Walter Ian, 1905-1991: Papers

Reference: MS-Papers-7938-13

Description: Inward and outward correspondence; correspondents entered in the Name field Quantity: 1 folder(s).

Image

[Lodge, Nevile Sidney] 1918-1989 :R. Natusch, F.N.Z.I.A. 1947.

Date: 1947

By: Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989; Moult, Eric Edwin, 1908-1995

Reference: A-279-041

Description: Profile caricature portrait of architect Rene Natusch, architect. One of a set of 12 caricatures of New Zealand architects commissioned in 1947 by the General Manager, Briscoe E. W. Mills & Co. Ltd, to hang in company boardroom (See A-279-037/048). Title from inscription below image. Inscriptions: Recto - beneath image - [Title]; Recto - bottom right - Nevile/Lodge/47; Verso - bottom centre - (Stamp): McGregor Wright's / Picture Framers and Art Dealers Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Airbrush caricature on board, 306 x 253 mm. Provenance: Originally commissioned in 1947 by the General Manager of Briscoe E.W. Mills & Co. Ltd, to hang in company boardroom, in Victoria Strreet, Wellington; relocated in early 1950s to Hardware Manager's office; on relocation of company offices in 1954, salvaged by vendor Mr E.E. Moult, then employed at Briscoe's. Exhibited in Bank of New Zealand foyer 7-18 August 1989 in conjunction with NZIA Biennial Conference, 10-13 August 1989: "Identikit Cities - Wellington and the wider world". Processing information: Previous group title used in Accessions Register Book: Twelve architects; caricatures by Nevile Sidney Lodge. 1947.

Manuscript

Correspondence - New Zealand Institute of Architects-New Zealand Junior Chamber of Comm...

Date: 1968

From: Holyoake, Keith Jacka (Sir), 1904-1983 : Political papers

Reference: MS-Papers-1814-442/4

Description: Quantity: 1 folder(s).

Manuscript

New Zealand Institute of Architects, South Island Branch - Correspondence

Date: 1925-1926

From: Daniell, Frederick Charles, 1879-1953 : Papers

Reference: MS-Papers-3763-3/2/50

Description: Quantity: 1 folder(s).

Manuscript

Royal Institute of British Architects - Papers

Date: 1946-1948

From: Newman, Frederick Hugh, 1900-1964 : Papers

Reference: MS-Papers-8081-03

Description: Comprises examination papers, correspondence with the RIBA and the New Institute of Architects and notes of interviews with representatives of the NZIA over the question of his registration as an architect in New Zealand. Quantity: 1 folder(s).