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STACK, Frederick Rice
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Frederick Rice Stack was a professional soldier. He arrived in Auckland in July 1857. He was staff officer to Robert Henry Wynyard from 1847 to 1858. He then worked for Wynyard’s successor, Charles Gold. In 1860, he purportedly painted the Wynyard family outside their Tāmaki Makaurau home from memory.[1] He left Aotearoa in April 1862. That same year, his well-known Views in the Province of Auckland were published in London by Day and Son.

 

[1] Una Platts, Nineteenth Century New Zealand Artists: A Guide & Handbook (Christchurch: Avon Fine Prints, 1980), 223.

Countries
United Kingdom;
Gender
Male,

STACK, Frederick Rice;

View of Auckland Harbour, New Zealand, Taken During the Regatta of January 1862 (The Race of the Māori War Canoes)

1862, Hand-coloured lithograph on paper

STACK, Frederick Rice;

View of Auckland, New Zealand, from the Crater of Mount Eden

1862, Hand-coloured lithograph on paper

STACK, Frederick Rice;

View of Auckland, New Zealand, from the Lake on the North Shore

1862, Hand-coloured lithograph on paper

STACK, Frederick Rice;

View of the Firth of the Thames, Waitematā, Tāmaki, and Gulf of Hauraki, from the Howick Ranges

1862, Hand-coloured lithograph on paper

STACK, Frederick Rice;

View of the Wairoa Creek (Pheasant Shooting on the Estate of Alexander Kennedy, Esquire, on the Road Leading to the Wairoa Valley)

1862, Hand-coloured lithograph on paper

STACK, Frederick Rice;

View from the Ranges Overlooking the Entrance to the Manukau Harbour, Auckland

1862, Hand-coloured lithograph on paper