Category Archives: 2015

Art + Design exhibition

Weapons Culture

Weapons culture web

Weapons culture 2015, screenprint on Tiepolo and charcoal in etched glass reagent bottle

This work consists of two parts. The book, ‘The Weapons Culture’ by physicist Ralph E Lapp published in 1968, utilised in this work traces the rise of weapons culture and its domination on American society. I employ the burnt book in my art practice in a transformation that exposes the materiality of the physical, organic form to engage in altered perceptions of the frame in which the book was set. The process of transformation involves pyrolysis which reduces the book to an almost pure carbon state which is ground as charcoal and stored in the reagent bottle. A portion of charcoal pigment from the book is crushed into a paste based ink to screenprint a summary of expenditure per capita that reveals the contrast between military expenditure and arts funding. This information was sourced via the internet from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute and the American National Endowment for the Arts and is cited at the base of the print.

The work was submitted as part of a group show at the H D Skinner Annex, Otago Museum to support the Art + Design Symposium held at the Dunedin School of Art 16-17 October 2015

Showing alongside this work was a print collaboration, UGANDA, produced by Neil Emmerson and me.

Art and Light

An exhibition celebrating the Unesco Year of Light 2015 that brings together scientists from the University of Otago and artists through the Dunedin School of Art. Kiri Mitchell and I teamed up with Janice Lord from the Botany Dept who specialises in night time pollinators in the Subantarctic Islands. We collaborated with braille transcribers Dave Allen and Paula Waby to produce an artists’ book of Dada poetry and the labels for the works in the show.

14 – 30 August at the H D Skinner Annex, Otago Museum.

Art Light 11 Art Light 14

Art Week

The OUSA Art Week saw the ‘Salon des femmes’ make an appearance at the Red Thread Gallery on 6 August, 2015. My work for this pop up show was documentation of an intervention at the art school a few weeks earlier on the day of a seminar on art and climate change. Printed paper towels with subtle messages about climate change were inserted into the paper towel dispensers in all the DSA public toilets.

climate 3

Red Thread

Shift work

shift work invite

Shift work is my first solo show at Inge Doesburg Gallery + Studio. The show features my series of reduction linocuts on the Dunedin Gasworks completed in 2013 and a new series of three monoprints that also reflect on the social history of Dunedin’s workforce.

Inge 1

Inge 3 Inge 2

Shadow Self

A group show with the Salon des Femmes in association with the Dunedin Fringe Festival 2015 at Mint Gallery, Moray Place, Dunedin from the 6th – 19th March. Each artist responded to the notion of ‘shadow self’ taken from the essay ‘Professions for Women’ by Virginia Woolf.

[Heading nowhere] in a Navy Blue Suit (detail)

[Heading nowhere] in a Navy Blue Suit (detail)

[Heading Nowhere] in a Navy Blue Suit, screenprints on Somerset Velvet paper, 28x76cm
The title is from an essay by Sue Kedgley that refers to women’s failed attempt to fit into a male corporate world. The shadow self is seen as what we deem to unconsciously deny in ourselves yet there are many women in history who have stood their ground. I recall playing dress ups as a young girl. Whether idolising screen stars or venerating the prowess of women through a myriad of media images, the notion of ‘dressing up’ allows the freedom to slip into anecdotes of the imagination and ultimately this affects our future. There are many legendary women that impact on our lives. Who has influenced yours?

Installation view with post it notes honouring women that have influenced the lives of the audience

Installation view with post it notes honouring women that have influenced the lives of the audience

Installation view from the opposite direction with images of myself 'dressing-up'

Installation view from the opposite direction with images of myself ‘dressing-up’

montage