Artists

Paul Dibble

Work History

Parallel Worlds
Parallel Worlds (2013)
Waiting for Time to Pass
Waiting for Time to Pass (2023)
A Moment
A Moment (2023)
Stories of a Lost Land
Stories of a Lost Land (2022)
Huia Sings Alone 1
Huia Sings Alone 1 (2023)
Huia on Ring
Huia on Ring (2023)
Soft Geometric Medium
Soft Geometric Medium (2008)
Rabbit Fights Back
Rabbit Fights Back (2014)

Artist Information

“My work is grounded in figuration, beginning with recognisable subjects and shapes, which I then abstract to a point where the form takes precedence. The play between positive and negative space is also important in my work.”1

Paul Dibble is one of New Zealand’s most acclaimed sculptors, his works ranging from small maquettes to large public pieces. Working primarily in bronze and grounded in a twentieth-century European sculptural tradition, his stylistic hallmarks include organic and sinuous curves, richly burnished patinas and a finely weighted sense of balance.

Often figurative in nature, Dibble captures his subjects in a single moment, but they are not frozen in time. The forms possess a tangible sense of barely contained energy and the elegant lines of the sculpture enhance the feeling of movement as the viewer’s gaze is drawn up and along and over the surfaces. This liveliness implies an ongoing narrative with which the viewer can engage, rather than presenting a solitary instant.

Dibble’s ideas spring from a range of sources: “the New Zealand vernacular, and folk art and writings, birds – it’s all in there.”2 Birds, the huia in particular, have special significance for Dibble and can be seen in a number of his sculptures as a reflection on the natural environment, specifically the damage inflicted upon it by the heavy hand of man.

One of Dibble’s most prominent works, the New Zealand Memorial Southern Stand, sits on a corner of London’s Hyde Park and was commissioned by New Zealand’s Ministry of Culture and Heritage. Unveiled in 2006, it is a collaborative work with architect John Hardwick-Smith and references Maori pou, or markers, and iron fencing waratahs.

Born in 1943 in Thames and raised on a farm in Waitakaruru on the Hauraki Plains, Dibble graduated from Elam with Honours in 1967. Based in the Manawatu, he received the New Zealand Order of Merit in 2004, an Honorary Doctorate, the first in the visual arts, from Massey University in 2007, and an Honorary Fellowship from the Universal College of Learning.

He has numerous public sculptures across the country and his works are also held in a number of private and public collections including The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, the Dowse Art Museum, the University of Waikato and Massey University.

1. Paul Dibble, quoted in Creative Giants of Palmerston North, Paul Dibble, 2015. Retrieved from http://www.creativegiants.co.nz/view/artist-index/d/paul-dibble.php
2. Richard Wolfe and Stephen Robinson, Artists @ Work, Penguin, 2010, p 194.

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Video production: Ross Wilson

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Group Exhibitions