Charlotte Graham


Charlotte Graham is a New Zealand artist based in Auckland. Her works are held at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki. Of Māori descent, Graham identifies with Ngāti Mahuta, Ngāi Tai ki Tāmaki, Ngāti Whanaunga, Ngāti Pāoa and Ngāti Tamaoho.

Early life

Charlotte Graham was born in 1972 in Perth, Australia, to Māori parents from New Zealand. The family moved back to Auckland, New Zealand six months after Graham was born. Graham has a number of relatives who have been practicing artists, including aunt Emily Karaka, uncle Mikaara Kirkwood, and cousins Te Rongo Kirkwood and Reuben Kirkwood. Graham's two older sisters are also artists.
Graham attended Mount Roskill Grammar School.

Education

Graham graduated with a Bachelor of Māori Visual Art from Massey University in 2001. She studied under Robert Jahnke, Shane Cotton and Kura Te Waru Rewiri.
After completing her bachelors in visual art, Graham trained as a teacher and worked at secondary schools in Auckland, including Māori boarding school St Stephens, while continuing to make art.

Career

Graham's art practice draws on her Māori heritage to explore critical issues that affect New Zealand society such as racism, cultural stereotyping and land rights, particularly the controversial foreshore and seabed legislation. Frequently her works incorporate Treaty of Waitangi and Māori motifs. Graham cites her grandmother, Rose Isobel Simons, as a key creative influence on her life. Graham believes that the foreshore and seabed controversy was the issue that gave her the political drive as an artist.
Solo exhibitions:
Group exhibitions:
Graham's son Te Kahu Whataarangi was born in 2004.