Roger Blackley
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1953
Roger Blackley | |
|---|---|
| Born | Roger Allan Blackley 1953 Masterton, New Zealand |
| Died | (aged 65) Wellington, New Zealand |
| Academic background | |
| Alma mater | University of Auckland – MA Victoria University of Wellington – PhD |
| Thesis | The galleries of Maoriland: Māori portraits, ethnological art, and the culture of the curio 1880–1910 (2016) |
| Academic work | |
| Discipline | New Zealand art history |
| Institutions | Auckland City Art Gallery Victoria University of Wellington |
Roger Allan Blackley (29 July 1953 – 15 May 2019) was a New Zealand art historian, author, and curator.[1][2] He was a noted authority on the work of artist C. F. Goldie.
Blackley was born in Masterton in 1953.[3][4] He studied art history at the University of Auckland, graduating Master of Arts with first-class honours.[3] During his time at the university, he was a member of the Auckland Gay Liberation Front, describing himself as a "radical gay" who believed it was "too late for liberalism, because gay means more than just who you screw - it's a whole lifestyle."[5] His 1978 master's thesis Writing Alfred Sharpe was a study of the painting and writing of the 19th-century landscape artist Alfred Sharpe.[3][6]