Friday, August 31, 2012
Bob
Robert Hughes the art critic and writer died
earlier this month and it set us thinking about our own memorable encounter
with him. He was giving a lecture in Wellington in the 1980s and we were asked
to keep him occupied for an afternoon.
What the hell do you show Robert Hughes
when he comes to Wellington? Not being complete masochists we stayed away from
art and started with the Maori and Pacific collections in the Dominion Museum
on Buckle Street.
Captain Cook's Hawai'ian feather cloak completely captivated him and his
knowledge of it was formidable. Across the way from this cultural marvel was
the Museum's attempt to display something of its fish collections. This was
done by sticking stuffed fish on rods so they looked as though they were in
schools swimming through a fake grotto. They got Hughes going prompting astonishing stories from the history of displaying things on sticks (as we
found out that day Hughes could speak with expertise on any subject at all and
we kept throwing up arcane and silly topics to see what eloquent miracles came
out of his mouth). Next we moved onto a small glass fish tank mounted
into a wall that had a single sea horse
floating in it. The abject poignancy of it all was too much for Hughes who
was convulsed with laughter, his face (already pretty florid) going a sort of
purple colour.
Back home, Bob (we were nervously calling
him Bob by this time) saw his book The shock of the new on the
shelves. He strode over, pulled it out and wrote with a flourish ‘For Jim and
Mary Barr with best from Bob Hughes’. We were too stunned to tell him it was a borrowed copy.
We stumped up with another copy for our
friend and decided that to commemorate the afternoon anyone called Bob or Robert
should sign alongside Hughes. Curator Robert Leonard and artist Robert Jesson did just
that, but then it turned out we didn't know very many Roberts and no Bobs and everything went all to hell.
From then on artists who stayed or
visited were invited to do something with book and its illustrations, you can
see a couple of them above. Now Bob's book is going to spend the rest of its
life in the Christchurch Art Gallery library.
Images: Top left, Marie Shannon deals up
The rat in the Rietveld chair and right, Michael Smither transforms Cezanne’s
mountain into Taranaki. Bottom Neil Pardington converts one of Albert Speer’s buildings for Germania into the Sarjeant Gallery.
Thursday, August 30, 2012
Islanders
The Biennale of Sydney
has usually included New Zealand artists in the mix although they’ve been
pretty stingy about it considering how close NZ is connected to Australian
culture. This year’s Biennale has three of them: Peter Robinson, Tiffany Singh
and Sriwhana Spong. If you can get there you can see all three on Cockatoo Island (Singh
also has an installation in Pier 3).
Cockatoo Island was first used as a Biennale venue in 2008 when this
year’s Documenta curator Carolyn
Christov-Bakargiev was artistic director. It’s a multi-layered place of spectacle and history and has become the
highlight of the event. A free ferry gets you there in just 15 minutes and
Sydney weather being what it is, the walk round the buildings, along the
wharfs, through tunnels and up long flights of stairs creates a dramatic experience.
Sneaking through the barriers to get a look behind Robinson’s gigantic polystyrene
construction, looking over the water listening to the rush of chimes from Singh’s
Knock on the sky, and glimpsing people moving like dancers behind Spong’s large
orange curtains, Cockatoo Island certainly delivered the goods. Lots of other great things too, of course. Maria Fernanda Cardoso's intense investigation into the sexual mechanics of insects was unforgettable (as you might expect with insect sex organs blown up some hundreds of times)and so too was the elegant neon work of Jonathan Jones. A run-down shipping yard on an island in one of the world's most beautiful harbours, got to love it.
Images: Top Tiffany
Singh Knock on the sky listen to the sound. Middle, Sriwhana Spong Costume for
a mourner and bottom Peter Robinson Snowball blind time (click on images to enlarge)
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
i watering
From the digital end of the lookalike
spectrum here is an iPhone app that lets you “paint just like Albert.” That’s Albert Namatjira
from the Northern Territory in Australia. It turns out you can create
‘watercolours’ Namatjira style, colour in a template in a paint-by-numbers format
or go DIY. Download a copy of the free app here.
Other art imitating possibilities are the
chance to transform your own photographs into an Andy Warhol-like-product on
iPad and “seeing your world through Picasso’s eyes” by converting videos into
“cubist paintings” (seriously) on an Android. Warhol here and the gateway to
cubism here.
Images: Left instant Namatjira and right, colour yourself Warhol
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Loose lips sink ships
While Fairfax Media is hell bent on giving
the visual arts as much grief as possible via the Dominion Post and Sunday Star
Times, pity the Capital Times. This Wellington freebie focuses on local news
and tried to do a story on Michael Parekowhai’s exhibition at Te Papa On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer. They called up to get some answers to a few
questions but no one was “available” to talk to them. Too busy? Too lofty? Too
nervous? Who knows.
So the CT turned to five dealer galleries.
Would they say something about on why the red piano was of national importance and whether
separating it from the two bronze pianos was the right thing to do? Turns out only one of them (Jenny Neligan of Bowen Galleries) while the rest wouldn’t stick their necks out to comment.
The journalist at the Capital Times was surprised that “the arts community, so
often critical of media coverage, are too scared to comment when given the
opportunity.” Given that Te Papa
has the biggest budget for the purchase of art in the country, he really shouldn’t have been.
Monday, August 27, 2012
Cover story
The visual arts don’t often
get the front page of a metropolitan daily. Well scratch that - they never do.
So you can expect if the Dominion Post gives over virtually a full front page
to anything art-related it's going to be either outrage at public expenditure
(their current dog-bites-child issue) or that they're hot on the trail of a
chance to stir up controversy.
So what do you think happens
when the Dowse Art Museum decides it will accommodate a Qatari artist's request
that her film of uncovered women preparing for a wedding be only shown to women
one at a time? The Dominion Post devotes its front page to position it as a 'No Men
Allowed' scandal. That's 1.380 column cms including an enormous 300 x 180 cm
photograph and a street banner. The subject of the uncredited mega-pic? A
Muslim woman with her head and face covered in the most traditional form. Given
that the film is actually about women who are not covered this could hardly be more inflammatory especially when the
artist herself Sophia Al-Maria appears in a small profile pic wearing a
headscarf.
The Dominion Post also
claims in its 30 center meter high sub header that the ‘women only’ request is
a “controversial edict.” In fact the Human Rights Commission has simply said it
will respond to any complaint (if there is one) as usual.
The director of the Dowse Cam McCracken
has called the film by Sophia Al-Maria “a really important work”. This
sentiment was echoed by a spokeswoman from the Islamic Women’s Council who told
the Dominion Post that she hoped the film would “promote some interesting
discussion rather than reactive controversy.” Thanks to the shock-horror handling
by the Dominion Post the chances of that are all but non existent.
NEXT DAY: Sunday Star Timestuff
"Lower Hutt resident Paul Young is calling for support for his
campaign against the work, which he says is "inflammatory and
provocative", and discriminates against half the population.
"As a ratepayer, I find it a shocking situation. I see this sort of
thing as being the thin end of the wedge," Young said.
"Steps have to be
taken to make sure that this doesn't go ahead in its current format."
And they're off.
You can see Sophia Al-Maria
talk about one of her other films here. Her film Scifi Wahabi was shown at the
Snake Pit Gallery in Auckland earlier this year.
Saturday, August 25, 2012
One day at OTN
J: It’s bloody well Saturday and we don’t have anything to post at all.
M: What about that thing on dolphins that do figurative paintings?
J: Not finished yet.
M: The Jeffrey Deitch story?
J: Did that last Saturday.
M: I guess we’ll have to fall back on showing one of those David Shrigley animations...
J: Yeah, looks like it.
Friday, August 24, 2012
Mr Art and Mr GST
This starts off as an art tattoo story and
ends up all over the place. The tattoo belongs to Ken Fehily. He's an art
collector and now chair of the Melbourne Art Foundation which runs the biennial
Melbourne Art Fair. He was also a tax guy at PricewaterhouseCoopers and helped
bring GST to Australia. All this is why he has a ‘Mr GST’ tat on one arm and
‘Mr Art’ on the other.
Fehily comes to the Melbourne Art Fair at a
tough time. Fourteen offshore galleries exhibited in 2008 but only 11 fronted
up this year with 70 percent of them from NZ, and that thanks to a baby-brother-discount
from the Art Fair and Creative NZ grants.
Anyway, Fehily has now arranged for Tim
Etchells (who started the popular Hong Kong Art Fair) to manage the MelbourneArt Fair for the next eight years. Etchells has also recently launched a SydneyArt Fair (…getting the picture?). Our own very successful Auckland Art Fair is no doubt keeping a nervous eye on all of this manoeuvring.
Mr Art was also involved in a big auction
last week in which he and his wife (she runs the dealer gallery FehilyContemporary in Melbourne which includes a handful of NZ artists) put up 72
works from their own collection. It was a disappointment. Just 25 lots sold at
an average price of $11,000 apparently putting the skids under their hopes for
funding a charitable foundation and putting some money back into the gallery.
You can read all this and other stuff about Mr Art in a more coherent form in
the Financial Review.
Image: Top, Mr GST with his Mr Art tat on the right arm. Bottom Mr Art with his Mr GST tat on the left arm. (photo of Ken Fehily by Arsineh
Houspian for the Financial Review). And thanks to tipster H for the tip off.
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Raft of references
(Better late than never... well that's our story anyway) In the past we'd have simply assumed this poster
was another lookalike of Gericault's The Raft of the Medusa but this time we
figured it was more likely to have come via Louis J. Steele and Charles F. Goldie’s effort in the Auckland Art
Gallery The Arrival
of the Maoris in
New Zealand. It turns out
that the choreographer Neil Ieremia of Black Grace was in fact inspired by something
else. A 2004 Bill Viola work called The Raft but of course that was itself
inspired by the G Théodore Géricault’s painting along
with the Steele Goldie version.
You can see an excerpt from Viola’s work
here and some other stuff that sprang out of Géricault’s
original here.
Image: Top the Black Grace poster and
bottom a scene from Bill Viola’s video The Raft
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
That simple
“I'm always optimistic about art, because
what would happen to us without it?”
Paula Cooper talking to Matthew Higgs in
Interview
To die for
One of the greatest pieces of good fortune
to come our way was back in the 1980s when Gretchen Albrecht and James Ross
offered to lend us a work by Colin McCahon while they were out of the country. It
was the number two written in white on a black landscape under a scumbled white
sky (in the crudest sense of the colour wheel) painted on hardboard. It has
since gone into another private collection but you can see it here.
There was a great story attached to this or
a similar painting. Apparently McCahon was in New Plymouth teaching an art
class when one of the participants asked him what this painting was about.
McCahon, a straight talker, said, “It’s about the number two” where upon the questioner,
rather taken aback, said, “Is that all?” McCahon looked up and after a pause
replied, “How much more do you want?” Hard to argue with that.
So when we saw this dramatic bit of
painting above a letterbox in Kilbirnie we were thinking of Colin McCahon and
the number two.
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Strictly two per customer
Target might have Jeff Koons Balloon Dog tied up but here The Warehouse is also hot on contemporary art lookalikes with a version of Damien Hirst's skull work For the love of God on the shelves. (Thanks S) You can watch the making of the Hirst version here.
Panting for art
We haven’t had a really good protest
outside an art museum in NZ for ages. It's hard to imagine Te Papa showing a statue
of the Virgin in a condom nowadays or the City Gallery fronting up with a
Robert Mapplethorpe exhibition, but in Caracas, Venezuela protest has reached
giddy heights sparked by the saga of the Matisse painting Odalisque
in Red Trousers.
Around 12 years ago the
painting was stolen from the Caracas Museum of Contemporary Art with the thieves
replacing it with a shonky version they'd knocked up. The switch went undiscovered
for who knows how long but came to light as the museum struggled to find works
by Jasper Johns, Henry Moore and Lucian Freud. Some
commentators think there may be up to 365 works missing (which puts the 20 that
Te Papa were having trouble finding a few years ago into perspective).
And the
troubles in Caracas aren't over. The Matisse Odalisque has been found by the
FBI but they are being slow, very slow, to return it (oh, oh, they are now
starting to think that this one might be another fake). Losing patience a group of women have done
what any sensible art protestors would do and gathered outside the museum just wearing
red harem pants. More here if you want it.
Image: Top protestors at the Caracas museum
and bottom the recovered painting
Monday, August 20, 2012
Respectfully yours
"Good art is often not easy to understand immediately. The four finalist
works in the Walters Prize at Auckland Art Gallery are enigmatic, to say
the least, and their format makes them difficult to approach."
T J McNamara's review of Auckland Art Gallery's Walters Prize in the NZH
T J McNamara's review of Auckland Art Gallery's Walters Prize in the NZH
Life of Brian
We saw Brian Butler (the last but one
director of Artspace) twice while we were away. Once in the flesh in his
gallery in Los Angeles and once on a screen in a museum in Paris.
Without wanting to belittle the personal
experience of being with Brian, the screen version was definitely more
intriguing. It turns out that Brian, a friend of the artist Paul McCarthy
(that’s something in itself when you think about it), was roped in to play a
part in one of McCarthy’s movies. Originally, Brian told us, he was supposed to
play the part of the critic (not a great part as it involved smelling
McCarthy’s backside at a critical point in the film) but arrived late and ended
up as the talk show host.
We saw the resulting 1995 McCarthy film 'Painter' at the
Quai Branly in Paris in the Masters of Chaos exhibition. As we watched up
popped a familiar face, albeit mostly concealed by a bulbous rubber nose
(Butler recalls McCarthy pulling off his own false nose and gluing it onto his -Butler's - face before he had a chance to give an opinion as to whether or not
this seemed like a good idea). If you want to see Brian Butler in ‘Painter’ it
is still viewable on YouTube. He turns up toward the end. The set and
all the props for ‘Painter’ are now part of the Rubell Family Collection in
Miami.
Later: Then in Auckland at St Paul St and we stumble in to Sean Grattan's movie HADHAD which we had seen in LA. And who's up there on the screen as we enter? Kate Butler (Brian's wife) who is one of its stars. Snap.
Images: Brian Butler (left of screen) in
Paul McCarthy’s film 'Painter'
Saturday, August 18, 2012
Twisted
You can’t keep a good balloon dog down.
Jeff Koons certainly tried. He figured his over-sized versions in stainless
steel gave him enough dibs to prevent Jamie Alexander from exhibiting and
selling balloon dog like product in his store.
He figured wrong. In a new twist
in the balloon dog wars the American chain store Target now offers a balloondog lamp. It is provocatively available in silver at $34.99 (including a bulb). And, the internet being what it is, there is already a balloon dog site showing off
all the recent and not so recent
houseware efforts. We’ve already pointed you to some of these last year
so this is balloon dog mania for the last time on OTN.
Friday, August 17, 2012
In touch
The Adam Art Gallery demonstrates that it
is possible to show contemporary art to people as though they are grown adults.
No Perspex box (Len Lye), no taped line on the floor (Andrew Drummond), no
stantion (Roger Peters) and no riser podium (Bill Culbert).
Images: Top left to right, Len Lye
Roundhead, Andrew Drummond 9 stoppages from the Journey of a sensitive cripple,
Peter Rogers Blue ladder and bottom, Bill Culbert Hokitika return journey
By the numbers
2 the number of times Marcel Duchamp’s
readymade Fountain has been exhibited in New Zealand
3
the number of days the Walters Prize artists were given to install their
work
3
the number of senior curators currently being sought by New Zealand art
museums
5 the number of months the starting of the
Len Lye Centre in New Plymouth has been delayed
19
the average amount in millions of dollars that the Lotteries Board has
given Creative NZ annually over the last 25 years
50 the number of years Billy Apple has been
Billy Apple
200 the number of art works Te Papa has
announced it has displayed over the last five years.
211
the number of works by Michael Smither in the collection of the
Govett-Brewster Art Gallery
914 the cost in dollars to hire the foyer
of the Dunedin Public Art Gallery for one night
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Little brick out
Image: Anish Kapoor's
mega sculpture Orbit made in LEGO by Warren
Elsmore. More here.
Prize winning exhibition
Indeed the quality of
the installations is on an obsession rating up there with Billy Apple. And of course it’s artists like Billy
who have prepared the way so that this kind of quality can be expected of
public institutions in presenting work. Not that we imagine it came easy. There
were no doubt tears and a bit of pushing and shoving to get there, but the four
artists (Simon Denny, Alicia Frankovich, Kate Newby and Sriwhana Spong) and the
Auckland Art Gallery have all certainly delivered the goods. A shame the
identity design and marketing collateral seem to come from another planet.
It also turned out
that we were absolutely right when we predicted that the Auckland Art Gallery
would never let Kate Newby ‘pour concrete over their new wooden floors.’ Two
steps inside the gallery space and we discover the floors of the contemporary
art space are some kind of concrete aggregate and not wood at all. Even when
we’re wrong, we’re right. What’s not to love about that?
Image: Kate Newby
carries her Walter’s Prize installation out onto the gallery roof with TRY TRY
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Dowsing
The Dowse is after a new director now that
Cam McCracken is headed south to run the Dunedin Public Art Gallery. There have
been some big changes under his direction and they've accelerated since curator
Emma Bugden arrived. McCracken inherited some confused spaces and entrances and
has only recently brought them back into clearer focus. When you add to that a
fresh programme of exhibitions via Bugden - life at the Dowse was starting to
look up.
Let's hope the new director keeps the place heading in the same sort
of direction. In its fractured history (of which we played a part: Jim was
director from 1976-1980) the Dowse has see-sawed at the changing passions and whims of
the individual directors. Its audience has been tossed around between craft
gallery, art gallery a Te Papa type local community museum and now a more
stable version of an expansive contemporary art museum. And of course the
collections reflect this erratic path. Little wonder it recently needed yet a
further rebranding (Dowse Art Gallery –> New Dowse –> Dowse Art Museum) during
McCracken’s tenure
With new energy around craft and
contemporary art and more innovative digital outreach, the Dowse could build an
important national role and excite its local community. What the Dowse doesn't
need is another change in direction or another attempt at mimicking Te Papa
(people, you need bigger budgets than the Hutt is ever going to have to do
that).
Apparently applications have closed so a
decision can't be too far away.
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Warning to auction houses
On Trade me at the moment this waterfall entry into the fake McCahon stakes. Auction houses can put it on their have-you-seen-this-painting files for when it comes back one day complete with signature. (thanks P)
One day at the TV studio
Producer 1: I was at an art gallery
yesterday.
Producer 2: Really!
P1: Yes, I was getting out of the rain. But
I did see the most incredible thing.
P2 What?
P1: There was this young blonde behind the
desk and she completely ignored me…even when I told her who I was.
P2: You’re kidding
P1: Then, can you believe this, she
answered the phone said, “it’s 3.5 million dollars.” And yawned.
P2: Yawned? She actually yawned?
P1: Absolutely. And I thought, what a great
reality tv show that would make.
P2: Blondes yawning?
P1: No, young women trying to make it in
the art world as dealers.
P2: You've lost me
P1: OK, let's go through it step-by-step. One, they're all great
looking. Two, they're blonde. I did mention that didn't I??
P2: Yes... and?
P1: And they'll be doing cool stuff, like going round the city looking at artist studios
P2: In high heels?
P1: Absolutely in high heels, wobbling around and making funny
comments about getting paint on their Pradas, doing photo shoots
with hot young artists and going to great parties with celebrities. Like, you know, learning
how hard life can be and, how whatever, friends are the most important thing of all.
P2: And they'll do all this without going on and on about art will
they?
P1: Well they'll have to do some art talk...
just enough to give the show some edge.
P2: We’d need a hot series name for the show.
Something that subtly puts together the fact that they're girls and that they're going
to try and run a gallery.
P1: I'm thinking .... Gallery Girls?
P2: I've said it before, and now I'll say it again. You’re a genius.
Monday, August 13, 2012
Getting art off the fifth floor: the first 12 years
March 2000
Prime Minister Helen Clark is critical of
how Te Papa displays its art and orders a review. In July the review recommends
a new art exhibition area. Philanthropist Denis Adam and architect Ian Athfield
propose reorganising Te Papa to accommodate a national art gallery and
remodelling the nearby Odlins Building for more exhibition space. (Source: Dominion Post)
2001
Te Papa converts the library space on the
fifth floor into dedicated art spaces. (Source: Ministry for Culture &Heritage)
November 2005
UN Studio is a winner in the Waitangi Park design competition
set up by the Wellington City Council. The brief was far-reaching but
one element was for a 3,500 square meter building to be used an extension of
the public exhibition space available to Te Papa. 'The concept for the two
floors is a focus on "the contemporary" - primarily contemporary art
and visual culture but with a breadth of view over contemporary ideas, popular
culture, and including contemporary Mäori and Pacific art, and extending to
fashion and design.' (Source: Dominion Post)
2006
The long-term exhibition Toi Te Papa: Art
of the Nation opens. Its display of Te Papa's collections is claimed as
"a major rethink of the museum’s presentation of art." (Source: Ministry for Culture &Heritage)
July 2010
Te Papa closes its outdoor sculpture court.
November 2010
Te Papa's new chairman Wira Gardiner throws his weight
behind building a $100 million art gallery to house the museum's collection.
"I'm in a position as chair of Te Papa to move it forward expeditiously.
We're engaged in that discussion and as far as I'm concerned, if we can line
all the ducks up, I see no reason why we can't press on." (Source: Dominion Post)
“Prime Minister John Key says the Government doesn’t
have $1 million to build a new national art gallery.... But we have an
indication of one or two very wealthy philanthropists who may be interested in putting
money into that venture...” (Source: 3News)
March 2011
"The board
has made the decision that if private interests want to pursue it [a new
National Art Gallery], they can, and if they later want to approach us to use
some of the collection, that's another matter – but from a board point of view,
we're getting on with our vision." Te Papa Chair Sir Wira Gardiner (Source: DominionPost)
September 2011
Te Papa focus groups to “explore and discuss ideas and concepts that Te Papa has about the
re-development of our art exhibitions on level five.” (Source: Over the net)
August 2012
“In March 2013, the Level 5 Gallery space
will be re-launched as part of a new model to show more of Te Papa's art
collection, more often, through a dynamic exhibition programme.” Michael Houlihan, Chief Executive at Te Papa
August 2012
A working party led by Museum Hotel’s Chris
Parkin and including Te Papa’s Kaihautu Michelle Hippolite, Property developer
Mark Dunaitchik, and Wellington Waterfront’s Ian Pike, is working on the
project.... Reliable sources say that $50 million has already been promised for what
the group is currently calling the Museum of Contemporary Art. It is
thought that includes $35 million from Dunaitchik. (Source: Capital Times)
“This [more art being seen at Te Papa]
might have happened earlier as Te Papa’s former director Seddon Bennington, had
been determined to get more works on display. His death had been a huge hold up
with everything being put on the back burner.” (Seddon Bennington was CE of Te
Papa for six years and died in 2009) Mary Kisler Senior Curator AAG on
secondment to Te Papa (Source: Capital Times)
Image: Un Studio’s design for what has
become known as the ‘Transition Building’.
Saturday, August 11, 2012
La La La
If you’re fascinated by the machinations of art museums you'll have been hanging out for news of the latest spills-and-thrills from MOCA in Los Angeles.
The short version is that the Museum hired Jeffrey Deitch (a very successful and highly regarded ex-dealer gallery owner) as Director in a bid to transform the financially and audience-challenged institution. He came in with populist guns blazing and raised attendances with exhibitions such as Street Art and some provocative celebrity intrusions.
Then he fired/let go the senior curator Paul Schimmel and all hell broke loose. Board members (including all the artist members – Baldessari, Kruger, Ruscha et al.) resigned furious at the swing toward entertainment at the expense of art and ex-directors put the boot in. Now in a not so subtle move in troubled times MOCA is mounting the event Songs on Conceptual Art on 11 August. It features a number of young artists doing versions of an influential John Baldessari video in which he sings Sol LeWitt's 35 Sentences on Conceptual Art.
The LA Times art critic calls it a “gentle jab”. Maybe it's just bad timing but as the museum has relented and agreed to hire another senior curator (the plan was not to bother) the general feeling is it should probably put all jabbing action on hold for the time being.
Image: Jeffrey Deitch (left). You can get a fuller picture of the whole sorry story here





























