100 years of the School Journal

E Mervyn Taylor

Cover illustration for the School Journal by E Mervyn Taylor

E. Mervyn Taylor, Cover illustration for the School Journal, Part 3, Winter 1960.

E Mervyn Taylor

E Mervyn Taylor's (1906-1964) depictions of New Zealand birds and tales from Māori mythology reproduced in the School Journal in the 1940s heralded a new emphasis on New Zealand content in the publication.

Taylor contributed drawings and woodcuts to the School Journal between 1940 and 1964, and served as art editor between 1944 and 1946. According to fellow artist and School Journal contributor John Drawbridge, Taylor "established the beginnings of a tradition of high standards in illustration, typography and book design in all the School Publications' publications".

Originally trained as a jewellery engraver, Taylor later became known for his elegant and meticulous wood engravings. In 1948 he and Russell Clark produced more than 150 drawings to accompany the book-length feature about traditional Māori life, 'Life in the Pa'. The feature told the story of a boy taken from his Northland village by a war party and raised by another tribe. Taylor contributed images of birds and of Māori implements and weapons that he had studied in the Dominion Museum in Wellington (now the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa).

Taylor's interest in Māori subjects was recognised in 1952, when he was awarded a two-year scholarship to study Polynesian art "from the viewpoint of the practical artist who is looking for models to follow in his own work".

E Mervyn Taylor biography – Dictionary of New Zealand Biography website

Short article about Taylor – Te Ao Hou online

Permission of the National Library of New Zealand Te Puna Mātauranga o Aotearoa must be obtained before any reuse of this image.

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