Pauline Kahurangi Yearbury (; 31 December 1928 â 27 May 1977) was a New Zealand artist. She is considered a leading practitioner in MÃÂori modernist art, and her work is held by the Whangarei Museum, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o TÃÂmaki and Russell Museum.
Yearbury was born in 1926 in Matauri Bay, Northland, New Zealand to Valentine Blomfield and Waiatua Hikuwai Ihaia. She went to school in Russell and in 1943 moved to Auckland to attend Elam School of Fine Arts.She was one of the first two MÃÂori women who studied at the school; graduating in 1946, she became the first MÃÂori person to receive a fine arts degree. Among other subjects, she learnt painting with John Weeks and mural design with Archie Fisher, the head of the school. Two years afterbeing accepted to the school, she taught there as a tutor .
Early influence to Yearbury's drawings were Elam School of Fine Arts teacher Lois White and Director Archibald Joseph Charles, whose skills were grounded in crisp lines and gradual shading . During art school Yearbury joined a collective of Elam School of Fine Arts graduates and teachers called the New Group. The New Group had a shared belief in 'a visual approach to their subjects', favouring representation over abstraction'. Members of the New Group included but not limited to Ida Eise, Selwyn Te Ngareatua Wilson, James Turkington, and May Smith .
In 1951 Yearbury moved back to Russell and worked creating murals and signs and tutoring in art. One of her largest murals was created in collaboration with her husband Jim - a nine-metre-long depiction of the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi for Waitangi Hotel in 1964. From 1966 to 1977 the couple also ran an art studio in the town, which displayed and sold the couple's wood panels of legendary MÃÂori figures â these were designed by Yearbury and incised and coloured by her husband.
In 1976 Yearbury published The Children of Rangi and Papa: The Maori Creation Story, an illustrated book including a reproduced series of her gouache paintings telling the MÃÂori story of creation. The publication was made possible by a grant from the MÃÂori Purposes Fund Board. The text was based on a 1956 revision of Sir George Grey's book Polynesian Mythology, and the foreword was written by Member of Parliament Whetu Tirikatene-Sullivan . Yearbury's illustrations intended to "create a bridge between the European style of realism and the traditional MÃÂori carving".
Within the book, Yearbury credits MÃÂori educator and community leader Maitu Te Hau as well as MÃÂori Labour Party membersWhetu Tirikatene-Sullivan & Matiu Rata for their assistance.
Yearbury's work was part of the First MÃÂori Festival of the Arts held in 1963 at NgÃÂruawÃÂhia, and was also part of the exhibition New Zealand MÃÂori Culture and the Contemporary Scene held at Canterbury Museum in 1966 curated by Buck Nin; this exhibition was the first major exhibition of MÃÂori art in a significant museum in New Zealand. The Department of External Affairs later funded the exhibition to tour to Sydney, Apia, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Hong Kong and Tokyo.
In 1977, one year after The Children of Rangi and Papa was published Pauline Yearbury passed away at age 50 .
In 2014, her painting Papatuanuku and Ranginui was featured on a New Zealand Post postage stamp.
Yearbury married Jim Yearbury in the late 1940s, a fellow student at Elam School of Fine Arts. She was of the NgÃÂpuhi iwi.
In The Children of Rangi and Papa: The Maori Creation Story Yearbury thanks her mother in the dedication; 'For my mother, Waiatua Hikuwai Ihaia Bloomfield, "from whence I am", as well as her husband Jim by stating "with whom, I am..." .