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  • Canary Gallery James Wallace Art Awards 2005

    Canary Gallery James Wallace Art Awards 2005

    Canary Gallery on Karangahape Road, Auckland. The exhibition will run until Friday January 20.

  • Finalist in the Iris Fisher Art Awards 2005

    Finalist in the Iris Fisher Art Awards 2005

    all_up.jpg

    Exhibited at Te Tuhi – The Mark in Pakuranga Auckland. Open from November 10 until December 14 between the hours of 10am and 4pm.

  • A Galaxy of Polymorphous Organisms

    A Galaxy of Polymorphous Organisms

    “… This thing is a Thneed.
    A Thneed’s a Fine-Something-That-All-People-Need!
    It’s a shirt. It’s a sock. It’s a glove. It’s a hat.
    But it has other uses. Yes, far beyond that.
    You can use it for carpets. For pillows! For sheets!
    Or curtains! Or covers for bicycle seats!”

    From The Lorax, by Dr Seuss, 1971.

    Playfulness, humour and nonsense are key aspects of this installation. The quirky art and illustrations of Dr Seuss has been the impetus behind the production these objects, which I see as absurd and dysfunctional. The objects and their arrangement in the space is intended to create a sense of wonder for the viewer, to experience the fun and playfulness involved in making the objects and installing them.

    As a process of iteration and repetition, crochet begins with a slip knot and involves creating a series of loops using a hooked needle, altering the topology of the original material from a simple length into a complex three dimensional form. Fascination with the ability to control and manipulate these materials has driven my practice, resulting in �mutations� of traditional crochet stitches. Although techniques like crochet were almost abandoned due to the introduction of modern manufacturing, crochet has retained its thrifty nature and developed into a sophisticated craft.

    My obsession with the various objects in this installation illustrates Freud�s theory of humans being �polymorphously perverse� (Wikipedia). In the early stages of an individual�s development, Freud believed that a person would find pleasure in any number and variety of objects. Freud asserted that this changed over time, as obsessions developed and formed fixations on specific objects as a child grew. Each object is a free flowing exploration of ideas, a response to my obsession, as manifested in colour, form, structure and scale.

  • If I only had time

    If I only had time

    Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki Student Friends Art Exhibition.

    The first of a series of drawings on plastic, featuring the symbolic ginkgo leaf. Regarded as a “living fossil” and a symbol of longevity.

  • subject/object opening at Randolph Street Gallery

    Exhibition opening Tuesday 5.30pm, Tuesday 24th May.
    Randolph Street Gallery, 26 Randolph Street, Newton. Off upper Queen Street.

  • and where does that get you?

    Construction/deconstruction process exhibition

    opening 5.30pm Monday 4th October 2004.
    Randolf Street Gallery, Newton

    Seven artists, seven different materials exploring the idea of where the education we get at art school will take us.