Strangers Arrive - Emigres and the Arts in New Zealand 1930-1980

Author(s): Leonard Bell

History | No Category

From the 1930s through the 1950s, a substantial number of forced migrants - refugees from Nazism, displaced people after World War II and escapees from Communist countries - arrived in New Zealand from Europe. Among them were an extraordinary group of artists and writers, photographers and architects whose European modernism radically reshaped the arts in this country. In words and pictures, Strangers Arrive tells their story.


Product Information

Longlisted for Ockhams Illustrated Non Fiction Award 2018  

Leonard Bell is associate professor of art history at the University of Auckland. His writings on cross-cultural interactions and representations and the work of travelling, migrant and refugee artists and photographers have been published in New Zealand, Britain, the United States, Australia, Germany and the Czech Republic. He is author of Marti Friedlander (Auckland University Press, 2009), Colonial Constructs: European Images of Maori 1840-1914 (AUP, 1992) and In Transit: Questions of Home and Belonging in New Zealand Art (2007). He is co-editor of Jewish Lives in New Zealand (2012).

General Fields

  • : 9781869408732
  • : Auckland University Press
  • : Auckland University Press
  • : October 2017
  • : 265mm X 215mm
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Leonard Bell
  • : Hardback with dustjacket
  • : English
  • : 709
  • : very good
  • : 310