Edith Collier


Edith Marion Collier was an early modern painter from New Zealand. She came from Wanganui. Her work is largely unknown at home and overseas.
Edith Collier's contribution to New Zealand art as an innovator, modernist and expatriate painter placed her in a most distinguished group, but her achievements have been eclipsed by the very company she kept - such as Frances Hodgkins and Margaret Preston.
After a thorough although conservative art education at the Technical School in Wanganui, Edith Collier left New Zealand in 1913 for St John's Wood School of Art in London. She was then aged 27. Rapidly disillusioned, and feeling marginalised as an expatriate woman painter, she became more influenced by other expatriates in London, and was to enjoy greater success through exhibiting with the Society of Women Artists and Women's International Art Club - venues outside the art establishment - and became a significant Modernist painter.
Collier returned to New Zealand in 1922 as an experienced artist with innovative ideas, but as a spinster in provincial Wanganui received harsh treatment, including what Drayton describes as savage, critical assessment and negative response from her own community. In a well-known incident her father burned many of her best paintings, including her nudes. She spent the rest of her life working alongside several unmarried sisters on her family’s farm, assisting family members with the birth and rearing of children. She died in 1964. A street is named after her in the suburb of St Johns Hill, Wanganui.
Sarjeant Gallery Te Whare o Rehua, in Whanganui, holds the majority of Collier's surviving works. These works can be viewed online.