Maude Burge


Maude Burge was a New Zealand painter influenced by James Nairn. She spent time as an expatriate artist specifically in Europe. Burge was a painting companion of Frances Hodgkins who called Maude Burge a "charming changeable woman" in her published letters. They painted together at the Burge family home in St.Tropez and in Ibiza. Burge's paintings are held in the permanent collection of Auckland Art Gallery, the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, the National Art Gallery of New Zealand, the Fletcher Trust Collection, the National Library of New Zealand and among private art collectors in the northern and southern hemispheres. Burge exhibited her paintings at the New Zealand Academy of Fine Arts.

Biography

Maude Burge was born in Lower Hutt, Wellington, New Zealand. Her career as an artist was part of the Modern Art movement. She created paintings in oils and watercolours. Burge painted portraits of the Māori in a modernist style. While living in Europe she painted still lifes and landscape scenes.
In New Zealand Burge was a pupil of James Nairn and trained under C.F. Goldie at his studio in Auckland. Burge painted one of Goldie's favourite early models Ina Te Papatahi, of the Ngāpuhi iwi tribe. While painting in Europe, Burge was as a pupil of English watercolourist Fred Mayer and was associated with British artists Frank Brangwyn and Philip Connard. Burge travelled extensively and painted watercolours of still lifes, market scenes and beach scenes in St. Tropez, Morocco and Dalmatia. Burge became a friend and painting companion of fellow New Zealand artist Frances Hodgkins. Hodgkins painted still lifes at Burge's garden in St. Tropez, 1931 and they painted together in Majorca and Ibiza. Hodgkins described Burge in her published letters as a "nervy changeable charming woman".
One of Burge's prominent paintings is an oil on canvas titled 'Portrait of Lady Fergusson'. The subject was her own sister Githa, wife of Admiral Sir James Fergusson, the brother of Sir Charles Fergusson, Governor-General of New Zealand. C.F. Goldie described Burge as being a better portrait painter of the Māori than himself. Burge's work has been sold through The International Art Centre in Parnell, Auckland and at Dunbar Sloane Art Auction house in Wellington. Burge exhibited in the New Zealand Academy of Fine Arts under her maiden name, Williams, from 1883–1906; and then from 1926, under her married name. Burge spent many years abroad until the mid-1930s when she returned to live in New Zealand.

Personal

Maude Burge was the 3rd eldest of 13 children born to Annie Palmer Beetham and Paihia-born landowner Thomas Coldham Williams. They lived in Hobson Street, Thorndon, Wellington. The family homestead is now owned and occupied by Queen Margaret College, Wellington. Burge's paternal grandfather was Henry Williams who translated the Treaty of Waitangi into Māori language. Burge's maternal grandfather was William Beetham the portrait painter. Burge's paternal grandmother was Marianne Williams the pioneering educator in New Zealand. Maude Burge married her husband George Aylesford Burge in New Zealand, 1909. George was the father of James Burge the English criminal law barrister who played a key role in court during the Profumo Affair. Maude and George travelled widely and lived and painted in locations such as St. Tropez, Cannes, Majorca, Ibiza, Morocco and Dalmatia, before returning to New Zealand in 1937. Mr and Mrs Burge settled at Taupo and than later at Cole Street in Masterton. Maude Burge died there in 1957 at the age of ninety-two and is buried at Masterton cemetery on Archer Street.

Books and publications