Tuesday, January 31, 2012

ON - Verge

http://www.on-verge.org/category/recommendations/page/5/

The Sugarbread House

THE SUGARBREAD HOUSE
Drawings and paintings by Lorene Taurerewa and Warwick McLeod at THE END Creative Artspace,
Brooklyn, NY
Opening reception 6.30 – 9.30 pm, Friday 27 January, 2012
THE END is at 13 Greenpoint Ave, Brooklyn, NY
(G Train to Greenpoint Ave, exit Greenpoint Ave)

WEBSITE: http://theendnyc.com/
Free
Email This Post Email This Post
Posted in Recommendations|Leave a comment
http://www.on-verge.org/author/admin/page/2/

Monday, January 30, 2012

The Vinyl Factory Soho, London


Album Cover for The Golden Filter


The Vinyl Factory in Soho, London. http://thevinylfactory.com/ 


My watercolours were used for the album cover design by New York indie electro duo THE GOLDEN FILTER. The duo produced the soundtrack SYNDROMES for a collaborative short film with Norwegian director Kristoffer Borgli. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U9JrcpqEksQ

The Golden Filter

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Unnerved The NZ Project, National Gallery of Victoria, Australia


NATIONAL GALLERY OF VICTORIA, MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA

NGV News

5 October 2010
Yvonne TODD New Zealander 1973– January 2005 from the Vagrants' reception centre series lightjet photograph 100.0 x 73.8 cm Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane Purchased 2007. Queensland Art Gallery Foundation Grant (2007.301) ©Yvonne Todd
Yvonne Todd

The National Gallery of Victoria today opened a major exhibition celebrating the extraordinary work of 26 contemporary New Zealand artists in Unnerved: The New Zealand Project.
This fascinating exhibition explores a rich and dark vein found in contemporary art in New Zealand, drawing on the disquieting aspects of New Zealand’s history and culture reflected through more than 100 works of art.
Jane Devery, Coordinating Curator, NGV said: “The works presented in Unnerved reveal a darkness and distinctive edginess that characterises this particular trend in New Zealand contemporary art. The psychological or physical unease underlying many works in the exhibitions is addressed with humour, parody and poetic subtlety.
The exhibition reflects the strength and vitality of contemporary art in New Zealand with works created by both established and emerging artists, across a range of mediums including painting, photography, sculpture, installation, drawing, film and video.
Unnerved engages with New Zealand’s changing social, political and cultural landscape, exploring a shifting sense of place, complex colonial past, the relationships between contemporary Māori, Pacific Islander and pakeha (non-indigenous) culture, and the interplay between performance, video and photography,” said Ms Devery.
A highlight of the exhibition is a group of sculptural works by Michael Parekowhai including his giant inflatable rabbit, Cosmo McMurtry, which will greet visitors to the exhibition, and a spectacular life-size seal balancing a grand piano on its nose titled The Horn of Africa. Also on display are a series of haunting photographs by Yvonne Todd, whose portrait photography often refers to B-grade films and pulp fiction novels.
Gerard Vaughan, Director, NGV said this exhibition demonstrates the NGV’s strong commitment to interesting and challenging contemporary art secured from around the world; he noted that the NGV has made a special commitment to exhibition the contemporary art of our region.
“Unnerved will introduce visitors to the rich contemporary arts scene of one of our closest neighbours, fascinating audiences with works ranging from the life size installations by Parekowhai through to the spectacular 30 metre photographic essay by Gavin Hipkins. This truly is a must see show this summer!” said Dr Vaughan.
Unnerved will also offer a strong and engaging collection of contemporary sculpture, installations, drawings, paintings, photography, film and video art by artists including Lisa Reihana, John Pule, Gavin Hipkins, Anne Noble, Ronnie van Hout, Shane Cotton, Julian Hooper and many others.
Unnerved: The New Zealand Project is on display at NGV International from 26 November 2010 to 27 February 2011. NGV International is open 10am–5pm, closed Tuesdays. Admission is free.
An exciting range of programs have been developed to coincide with the exhibition which can be viewed at ngv.vic.gov.au
A Queensland Art Gallery touring exhibition.
Support sponsor: Sofitel Melbourne On Collins


http://figuregroundzine.wordpress.com/2011/02/03/the-values-of-voids-and-trash/

Lorene Taurerewa, Sensible World (10) 2008 ink on duralar 11 x 8 in
Lorene Taurerewa, Sensible World (10) 2008 ink on duralar 11 x 8 in
Another form of void is witnessed in one of the highlights of Unnerved: The New Zealand Project at the NGV International. Lorene Taurerewa’s Psychopompe series presents ink on duralar (a transparent plastic film, not unlike acetate) renderings of strange dreams, in which animals transport humans into a nether world. The works draw on shared links between Jungian psychoanalysis, Aesop’s and Grimm’s fairy-tales, in which animals act as a guide for souls moving between the conscious and unconscious. The word psychopompe is derived from the Greek psychopompous, literally ‘guide of souls’. [2] The reference in aesthetic style Chinese drawings, which place great value on expanses of white as a representation of the void. This void is furthered by the fact that the ink drawings are suspended on a transparent film, the picture plane existing near independently of the substrate. Originally, many of these works were shown suspended from wires in the air [3]; at the NGV they are displayed layed flat on a white table in the middle of the room. Whilst gorgeous layed down on the white surface, the suspended installation definitely heightens the interpretation that these drawings are extensions of a psyche, peeping out of a void and floating out of context between the conscious and subconscious.
Ava Seymour, Day Care Walkabouts, 1997, colour photograph of a photomontage, 73 x 92 cm, Collection Auckland Art Gallery
Ava Seymour, Day Care Walkabouts, 1997, colour photograph of a photomontage, 73 x 92 cm, Collection Auckland Art Gallery
The exhibition also contains a well selected four works from Ava Seymour’s Health, Happiness and Housing series (1997). (The Auckland Art Gallery has a good selection of images from this series, though not those on show at the NGV). Four works from Seymour’s series are hung in the same room as Taurerewa’s works, making a neat contrast to the ways psychoanalysis has influenced art practice — the former following the Surrealist trajectory, and the latter attempted to recreate the fluidity of fluctuating consciousness. Seymour’s works are situated in the void of the suburbs, a feeling amplified by the near exclusive use of blank white skies that serve to further strip the collages of a real world context. Both Syemour’s and Taurerewa’s works are created using relatively inexpensive means (compared with, for example, shooting a HD video or casting a bronze sculpture), but resulting in a polished and valuable piece. Taurerewa’s drawings sift the trash out of the subconscious and render it as art, whilst Seymour’s collages re-figure disposable photographs for the same purpose.

Queensland Art Gallery, Australia

http://qag.qld.gov.au/exhibitions/past/2010/unnerved/artists/lorene_taurerewa

Psychopompe (detail) (from `Psychopompe' series) 2008
Lorene Taurerewa | New Zealand b.1961 | Psychopompe (detail) (from 'Psychopompe' series) 2008 | Pen and ink on mylar | 20 sheets: 30.5 x 23cm (each) | Purchased 2008. The Queensland Government's Gallery of Modern Art Acquisitions Fund | Collection: Queensland Art Gallery


Lorene Taurerewa’s works evoke feelings of uncanniness or strangeness in relatively familiar settings. Taurerewa uses an emotive visual language to draw on her ancestral inheritance, Aesop’s fables, Grimm’s fairytales and Jungian tropes, culminating in a visual code that both fascinates and repels.
Psychopompos (from Greek) means a ‘guide of souls’, and refers to a spiritual being, often animal in form, who shepherds the recently departed from this life to the next. In the psychoanalytic terminology of Carl Jung, the ‘psychopomp’ mediates our conscious and unconscious realms. In Aesop’s allegories, animal characters reflected human traits in order to illustrate moral lessons. Taurerewa’s cast of animals likewise appear to escort human protagonists to unknown places.
Taurerewa’s drawings are delicate and intuitive, and their ephemeral nature is heightened by their translucent plastic background. Here, Taurerewa draws on her study of traditional Chinese brush-and-ink painting, and its key concept of the void or emptiness. Dark and otherworldly, Psychopompe appears to exist outside time, emerging instead as the not-quite-controllable creations of psychological realms.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

My painting The Wedding Guest hanging in an exhibition alongside Peter Robinson and Ian Scotts work..

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Lorene Taurerewa at Thermostat Gallery, New Zealand

Upcoming show in March 2012

Lorene Taurerewa, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia


The National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia acquired a suite of watercolours by Lorene Taurerewa, seen here one of the drawings.
Lorene’s drawings in ‘Unnerved: The New Zealand Project’ recently on at the NGV, following it’s run at Queensland Gallery/Gallery of Modern Art in Brisbane, received a fantastic response and it’s exciting that Lorene’s work is now permanently in the NGV’s collection.
www.ngv.vic.gov.au

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Lorene Taurerewa in group show at Kentler Drawing Space, Brooklyn, NY


THE INFLUENTIAL FEMALE
Drawings Inspired by Women in History


February 3 – March 2
Curator: Randall HarrisArtists: Clarity Haynes, Meridith McNeal, Edward Monovich, Arlene Morris
Annysa Ng, K. Saito, Jacquelyn Schiffman, Viviane Silvera
Lorene Taurerewa, Jono Vaughan

Opening Reception: Friday, February 3, 6 – 8pm
Curator’s Talk: Sunday, February 19, 4pm


Exhibitions and events are
FREE & OPEN TO THE PUBLIC:
Thursday - Sunday, 12 - 5pm

SmallWorks gallery opens in Brisbane - Australian Art Collector



16 January 2012 | A new gallery has opened in Brisbane with a mission to show work by New Zealand artists.

Founded by Daniel Clifford, SmallWorks will have openings and be open on select Saturdays, but is essentially an appointment-only gallery.

“There is this constant cliché of New Zealand art being this sort of repressed and grim thing where either a playful colonialist narrative or a remote gothic narrative is played out,” says Clifford. “Well, there is that, but there is so much more to it. What SmallWorks is attempting to do is to introduce this new wave of artists whose narrative doesn't fall into that at all.

“One of the ways for them to get known outside of New Zealand (because it generally doesn't fit into the current canon) is for a small intimate offshore gallery to champion them.”

“One of the ways for them to get known outside of New Zealand (because it generally doesn't fit into the current canon) is for a small intimate offshore gallery to champion them.”

Clifford says he is mainly interested in painting and drawing, but the gallery will also show photographs and sculpture occasionally.

The gallery opened in November with a group exhibition including Ben Pearce and the 2012 exhibition program includes Rob McLeod, Lorene Taurerewa, Matthew Couper and Piers Secunda.

SmallWorks is at 87 Bromley Street, Kangaroo Point, Brisbane. For appointments ring 0449 259 175  



Ben Pearce, Rock Mound. Acrylic and gouache on ply, 200 x 150cm. Courtesy: the artist and SmallWorks, Brisbane
Related stories:

Tuesday, January 17, 2012


Coming up is a new exhibition of drawings and paintings THE SUGARBREAD HOUSE by me! and Warwick McLeod  at THE END http://theendnyc.com/blog/ a recording house/gallery/performance space in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, NY. It opens on the 27th of January at 6.30pm.

On-Verge an online forum for the arts and cultural dialogue

About

on-verge.org is a new online forum for arts and cultural dialogue developed by CUE Art Foundation in collaboration with AICA USA. Populated by the writing, opinions and musings of both CUE’s Young Art Critic Mentoring Program Alumni and other emerging writers from around the United States, on-verge.org serves as a platform to present to readers art and culture that may not be covered by mainstream media. This site continues the long-lasting relationship CUE maintains with fantastic emerging writers, and gives them the opportunity to highlight emerging and under-recognized artists across the globe.
http://www.on-verge.org/category/recommendations/

Monday, January 9, 2012

Lorene Taurerewa exhibits in The Intraspace Project at The Waikato Museum, New Zealand


The Intraspace Project is the Waikato Museum's latest initiative in interrogating the building as installlation site. Activating non-gallery space as sites where artists' interventions can occur.
Utilising utilitarian locations within and external to the museum building, the curator will solicit artists to interface with the designated spaces and respond accordingly. These interactions will culminate in anything from one to seven works in new spaces that could last one minute to one month.
All of the works will be made visible to the world, creating a virtual but real time exhibition that is not bound by fiscal, spatial nor bureaucratic intervention. It's the simple USE of space that will activate the art.
This is the first of its kind in Museums in Aotearoa and possibly internationally.

Lorene Taurerewa (b.NZ currently resides in New York )
The work of Lorene Taurerewa could be equated to early David Bowie in terms of timbre; a rich blend of unsettling familiarity and beauty.'
Using scale and negative space, she is able to speak volumes about displacement and perhaps a sense of isolation.
This work is a particularly powerful image along with it's title 'The Stong Shall Lead the Weak'. A dog acts as master leading this dunce-like character on a leash. Opening up the subject of power, control, and questions of survival through interdependence.
Lorene Taurerewa (nee. Clotworthy) is New Zealand-born, of New Zealand and Samoan descent. She has exhibited widely nationally and internationally. Taurerewa emigrated to New York in 2009 where she is represented in numerous collections nationally and internationally.
http://www.waikatomuseum.co.nz/page/pageid/2145874159

Lorene Taurerewa and Warwick McLeod at THE END, Brooklyn, NY