Garth Tapper
Overview
Garth Tapper (1927-1999) was a prominent New Zealand painter and influential teacher, known for his expressive figurative works depicting everyday life. Born in 1927 in Waikato, he studied at the Elam School of Fine Arts before continuing his training in Europe in the early 1950s. Tapper later taught painting at Elam for 17 years, shaping a generation of New Zealand artists. His work often portrayed “typical Kiwis” in social settings such as pubs, courtrooms, and workplaces, combining strong brushwork with a humanist perspective. Awarded an ONZM in 1998, he remains a key figure in Aotearoa’s modern art history.
Works
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![Garth Tapper, Untitled [Portrait of Ani Milner], 1999](https://static-assets.artlogic.net/w_2400,h_2400,c_limit,f_auto,fl_lossy,q_auto/artlogicstorage/gowlangsford/images/view/cfd5be5adc0de9b5a506a27814c76465j/gowlangsford-garth-tapper-untitled-portrait-of-ani-milner-1999.jpg)