A series of articles by Centre for New Zealand Art Research and Discovery (CNZARD) staff on individual works in the collection, published in the University's fortnightly newsletter UniNews.
Not many New Zealand artists can lay claim to having infiltrated hundreds of private homes and public gallery collections with their work.
With her husband the eminent psychiatrist Fraser McDonald, Jacqueline Fahey lived her married life in hospital houses until 1984.
Titling her work after the building method beloved by immigrant pioneers in the outback of Australia, Rosalie Gascoigne weaves text-laden soft drink crate wood into a grid of yellow and black.