Gow Langsford Gallery

Gow Langsford Gallery Gow Langsford is New Zealand's pre-eminent dealer gallery, representing the best contemporary artists from NZ and abroad.

Find us in Auckland Central and our new flagship gallery in Onehunga, Auckland. Gow Langsford is New Zealand’s leading art dealership. For over 35 years, the gallery has fostered and promoted the best modern and contemporary art from New Zealand and abroad, cultivating an engaged audience and collector base. With a long-term presence in central Auckland, directly opposite Auckland Art Gallery, Gow

Langsford has become an integral part of the country’s cultural landscape. In early 2024, Gow Langsford launched its flagship premises in the Auckland suburb of Onehunga. The facility is one of the largest commercial art spaces in Australasia, and includes premium gallery spaces, studios for promising artists, and an extensive visual arts library. The building was originally commissioned in 1958 by Polish businesswoman, philanthropist, and arts patron, Helena Rubinstein. Gow Langsford has extensively refurbished the site, ensuring that its best features have been preserved while the building has been tastefully modernised. Gow Langsford represents more than thirty established artists. This includes many of New Zealand’s best, along with a number of leading international artists. The gallery has successfully presented over 500 exhibitions, significantly influencing the market for and discourse around contemporary art in New Zealand. It has played a significant role in shaping the careers of many of New Zealand’s most well-known artists. In addition to its dynamic schedule of exhibitions, Gow Langsford is central to New Zealand’s secondary art market. It is uniquely client-centred and has the networks and expertise to broker the best outcomes for buyers and sellers of high value artworks. The Gallery’s experienced staff provide comprehensive art collection advice, including acquisitions, valuations, restoration and framing advice, investment opportunities and collection management. The gallery was founded by John Gow and Gary Langsford in 1987. The pair started out exhibiting art in a converted garage in the Auckland suburb of Grey Lynn. Since then, Gow Langsford has become one of New Zealand's most distinguished dealer galleries. Both founding directors are passionate advocates for the visual arts and are committed to the career development of the artists they represent. In 2015, Anna Jackson also became a director of the gallery. Together, the directors have fostered the growth of contemporary art in New Zealand and enabled the careers of many of this country’s most notable artists, including Judy Millar, John Pule, Max Gimblett, Dick Frizzell and Reuben Paterson. They have actively sought to introduce local audiences to international art, and in turn, international visitors to New Zealand art. Gow Langsford has hosted one-man shows by Pablo Picasso (1998), Damien Hirst (2010), Bernar Venet (2006 and 2012), Donald Judd (2002), Tony Cragg (2005 and 2011) and Andy Warhol (2013). The gallery has enjoyed considerable success in placing works in major collections – in public institutions and private homes, locally and internationally. Gow Langsford is widely regarded as New Zealand’s most influential dealer gallery. It has built a reputation for excellence, consistently acting in the best interests of its artists, clients, and the general public.

Join us for the opening night of Hugo Koha Lindsay's Minor infractions on Tuesday 9 June from 5-7pm at Gow Langsford Auc...
04/06/2026

Join us for the opening night of Hugo Koha Lindsay's Minor infractions on Tuesday 9 June from 5-7pm at Gow Langsford Auckland City.

This new series of work explores language at the point of collapse – where meaning becomes unstable, fragmented and obscured through repetition, labour and acts of physical disruption. Across the surfaces of each canvas, vowel sounds in both English and te reo Māori are repeated endlessly in cursive script, written through the reverse of the canvas so that they appear backwards. After the surfaces are inscribed, the canvases are cut or torn into measured sections, reordered and sewn back together.

Contact us for a digital catalogue or further information.

Pictured:
Vowels no 14. Cut and reordered, 2026
graphite compound and synthetic polymer on cotton duck
1675 x 1520mm

Gow Langsford is pleased to announce its representation of internationally acclaimed interdisciplinary artist Yuki Kihar...
03/06/2026

Gow Langsford is pleased to announce its representation of internationally acclaimed interdisciplinary artist Yuki Kihara.

“Yuki Kihara is one of the most interesting and compelling artists working in the Pacific today. Her practice is intellectually rigorous, visually powerful and deeply engaged with urgent global conversations, while remaining grounded in Sāmoan knowledge systems and community collaboration. We are honoured to welcome Yuki to the gallery and look forward to supporting the next chapter of her remarkable career." - Anna Jackson, Director, Gow Langsford Gallery

We are pleased to be offering works from Kihara’s most recent series 'Woven Memories' (2026) ahead of her debut solo exhibition with the gallery in early 2027. These first six works respond to Cyclone Evan (2012) which carved a destructive path across the Pacific, leaving a lasting mark on the histories of Wallis and Futuna, Sāmoa, American Sāmoa, Tonga, Fiji and Aotearoa New Zealand. Drawing on infrared satellite imagery, the series transforms meteorological records into woven acts of remembrance. The project remains ongoing, with further works yet to come responding to more recent cyclones including Malia, Vaianu and Sinlaku, which have impacted communities across the Pacific.

Contact us for further information.

Image 1: Portrait of artist Yuki Kihara by Gui Taccetti
Image 2: Woven Memories: Evan - Aotearoa New Zealand, 2026
Image 3: Woven Memories: Evan - Tonga, 2026 [detail]
Image 4: Woven Memories: Evan - American Sāmoa, 2026 [detail]
Each: pandanus mat, embroidered with the assistance of the Moata'a Aualuma Community, Upolu Island, 830 x 1080mm (incl. fringe length: 70mm)

"In 'Encounter with the Past' (2008), Jacqueline Fahey transforms autobiography into a fractured mnemonic theatre, colla...
02/06/2026

"In 'Encounter with the Past' (2008), Jacqueline Fahey transforms autobiography into a fractured mnemonic theatre, collapsing multiple moments into one luridly coloured, simultaneous present. Disparate figures — spectral fragments of a recalled life — haunt a yellow brick road that winds through the verdant lawns of suburbia.

Strikingly, in this densely populated tableau, no protagonist meets another’s gaze. Each inhabits a separate psychological register, as though memory itself has dislocated them from shared time, revealing a vitality that is by turns contradictory, exuberant, and restlessly chaotic. The painting adopts a Janus-like vision — looking backward to the past while simultaneously straining forward toward the future — holding past and future in uneasy simultaneity."
Excerpt of text by Anastasia Falkov.

View this work and more in Fahey's solo exhibition 'Protest Paintings' at Gow Langsford Onehunga.

Work details:
Jacqueline Fahey
Encounter with the Past, 2008
oil on canvas
1003 x 1513mm
1050 x 1560mm framed

29/05/2026
Yafeng Duan's new exhibition 'Something in the Air' features work inspired by her trip to Aotearoa in 2024 where it brou...
29/05/2026

Yafeng Duan's new exhibition 'Something in the Air' features work inspired by her trip to Aotearoa in 2024 where it brought a heightened sensitivity to shifting light and atmosphere, particularly within the sky; with purples mixing into soft greys, pinks that tended towards oranges.

The exhibition is on now at our Auckland City Gallery until Saturday 6 June. Get in touch for a catalogue of available works.

Photos: Sam Hartnett.

Fun, fantastical and unapologetically pink, Jacqueline Fahey's 'Augusta and Lucy taking up the theatre' (1981-82) turns ...
28/05/2026

Fun, fantastical and unapologetically pink, Jacqueline Fahey's 'Augusta and Lucy taking up the theatre' (1981-82) turns a moment of urban change into an act of imaginative resistance. The painting draws on a moment in 1981 when Fahey was driving along Tāmaki Makaurau’s Symonds Street with her daughter Augusta and her friend Lucy. Passing what was known to them as the ‘Pink Palace’, the girls were shocked to see the building slated for demolition. First opened in 1911, the building had lived many lives – as a theatre, a cinema, a Chinese community centre and even briefly a roller-skating rink (the ‘Rainbow Roller’).

For Augusta and Lucy, the Pink Palace had been a hub of creative energy and music. A place where they spent time with their punk friends, alongside other groups who celebrated musical heroes such as Bob Marley (seen here on a front window poster). For property developers, however, the building represented little more than a valuable piece of inner-city real estate.

In the painting, Augusta and Lucy strain to lift the Pink Palace from the ground, as if attempting to rescue it, to preserve it, to quite literally ‘take it up’. The theatre tears away from the street, a jagged drip of blue appearing in the gap below in vivid contrast to the pink façade. Their effort is both playful and poignant, as if they might carry the building away from its fate and repurpose it as the home of their own theatre company – an apt aspiration for two young women who were in drama school at the time.
Text by Madi Macdonald.

View this work as part of Jacqueline's solo exhibition 'Protest Paintings' on view at Gow Langsford Onehunga until 20 June.

Jacqueline Fahey's 'Protest Paintings' is now on at our Onehunga Gallery until 20th June. Contact us for a digital catal...
26/05/2026

Jacqueline Fahey's 'Protest Paintings' is now on at our Onehunga Gallery until 20th June.

Contact us for a digital catalogue or work information.

Photos: Sam Hartnett.

Join us today from 2-4pm at our Onehunga Gallery for the opening of Jacqueline Fahey 'Protest Paintings'."Driven by a de...
22/05/2026

Join us today from 2-4pm at our Onehunga Gallery for the opening of Jacqueline Fahey 'Protest Paintings'.

"Driven by a deep desire to challenge the structures of power that shape our lives – from the patriarchy to global geopolitics – her canvases offer a site to make visible the interlinked nature of systems of oppression. The very act of painting from a distinctively feminist subjectivity – particularly during the earlier decades of her career – marks a clear act of protest directed at the gendered power dynamics embedded in the art world and broader society." Excerpt from essay by Kirsty Baker.

Contact us for further details or a digital catalogue.

Photos: Tobias Kraus

Address

28-36 Wellesley Street East
Auckland
1010

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 10am - 5pm
Thursday 10am - 5pm
Friday 10am - 5pm
Saturday 9am - 4pm

Telephone

+6493034290

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Gow Langsford Gallery posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Category