Petar/James Gallery

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Location56 Shortland Street, Auckland
Coordinates36°50′49″S 174°46′07″E / 36.8469°S 174.7685°E / -36.8469; 174.7685
Petar/James Gallery
Interactive map of the Petar/James Gallery area
General information
Location56 Shortland Street, Auckland
Coordinates36°50′49″S 174°46′07″E / 36.8469°S 174.7685°E / -36.8469; 174.7685

The Petar/James Gallery was the first New Zealand dealer gallery to focus on abstract art and the idea of Internationalism.

The Petar/James Gallery was opened in Auckland in 1972[1] by brothers James and Petar Vuletic, occupying part of the Law Society Building.[2] Petar was generally the public face of the gallery telling the Auckland Star, ‘Jim and I believe in combining the best New Zealand painters in one gallery.’[3] The initiative disturbed the New Zealand art world as Wellington art dealer Peter McLeavey remarked, ‘the whole operation has rocked a few boats. He has the drive, charm and a quality of business that should make him a success.’ McLeavey also noted of the clean, modern gallery space that there was ‘no better private gallery in N.Z. or Australia.’[4] The Petar/James Gallery closed in 1978.[5] For the rest of the 1970s and into the 1980s, often using the Petar James Gallery brand, Petar Vuletic continued to mount exhibitions, sell art and consult for collectors and corporations, including the significant Fletcher Trust Collection.[6]

Petar Vuletic

Petar Vuletic, the director of the Petar/James Gallery, began collecting art while a law student and wrote about the abstract artist Milan Mrkusich in the student newspaper Craccum as early as 1968.[7] Around the same time, he formed a close association with Mrkusich who encouraged him to become an art dealer.[8]  In 1972, as he was setting up the Petar/James Gallery, Petar Vuletic had worked with academic art historian Michael Dunn to organize the first major retrospective of Milan Mrkusich's work at the Auckland City Art Gallery.[9]

Philosophy

Exhibitions

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