Tag Archives: Award

NZPPA2024

I was honoured to be selected as a finalist for the NZ Painting & Printmaking Awards 2024 by guest judges Marian Maguire and Kura Te Waru-Rewiri. The awards and exhibition were run by the Waikato Society of Arts and held at artspost galleries, Kirikiriroa Hamilton.

The work, Idyll / Idle, a seven colour screenprint on found vintage wallpaper, incorporates port activity from my local Port Chalmers during the busy cruise ship season. There were two cruise ships in Port that day but by the time I got there one had already sailed to be replaced by the container boat. The work also includes experimentation with Photoshop AI generation to incorporate refugee boats in the lower repeat of the wallpaper. The AI generation took into account the existing background style and helped me understand and be informed on the impact and power AI can have in image manipulation.

Idyll / Idle (detail), 2024, seven colour screenprint on found vintage wallpaper

VI International Mini Print Cantabria

It was wonderful to be involved in this mini print exhibition again, having taken part in the first one in 2018. This year there were 329 artists from 50 countries in the exhibition. Congratulations to SM Pro Art Circle and the judges for the tremendous work and organisation in bringing this exhibition to fruition. Congratulations to all the artists involved and to the winners, well done! I was thrilled to get a 3rd mention for my work Waipapa Point I.

Parkin Drawing Prize 2021

I was very excited to receive a Merit Award in the 2021 Parkin Drawing Prize.

Congratulations to Mark Braunias on his tremendous win.

 Mark Braunias’ winning work “In Search of the Saccharine Underground” in the right foreground

My thanks to the judge and selection panel, and to the curator and team at the NZ Academy of Fine Arts.

Installation view

Parkin Drawing Prize

It was such a privilege to be announced a finalist in the 2019 Parkin Drawing Prize and to be showing my work with friends and colleagues from the Dunedin School of Art. Congratulations to all the finalists and the winners.

I was lucky enough to attend the opening and was very impressed with the install and curation of the wide variety of works on display.

 

Estuary Art and Ecology Prize 2018

9 July – 19 August, 2018

I was thrilled to be announced winner of this year’s Estuary Art & Ecology Prize organised by Malcolm Smith Gallery, UXBRIDGE Arts & Culture in Howick, Auckland.

My work Unplugged responded to the Tāmaki Estuary, to underscore the ecological value of this vital waterway and encourage action against its pollution.

Artist statement:

The catalyst for this artwork is a book purchased in a charity shop, ‘Auckland Unplugged, Coping with Critical Infrastructure Failure’.* The book reports on the electricity blackout that disrupted Auckland’s central business district for five weeks over the summer of 1998 revealing a vulnerable city infrastructure requiring detailed risk evaluation in order to maintain efficiency. This crisis highlights our dependence not only on power supply but also town water supply and waste management and exacerbates a future of unsustainable uncertainty. These networks are interconnected with population growth and consumption placing huge demands on this post-industrial oasis. In attempting to create an artwork that conveys the adverse human impact on the environment, while acknowledging the waterways of the Tāmaki estuary and indeed the many contaminated waterways of Aotearoa, New Zealand, the book ‘Auckland Unplugged..’ is ironically reduced to pure carbon to be used as a filtering agent to hypothetically purify (or unblock) our polluted waters.

The artwork comprises the carbon remains of the book stored in a reagent bottle with the book title etched on the glass and photographic evidence of estuary water before and after filtration.

* Newlove, Lindy. Eric Stern, Lina Svedin. Lanham, Md. : Lexington Books, 2003

The judge, Paul Brobbel had this to say of my work:

“A work that stands askew from the other works in the exhibition. Unplugged is, on first consideration, a challenging artwork – intelligent with possibly an element of humour to some. But tilting at the political, the bureaucratic and the pathetic, this work adds a unique element of anger and aggression to the exhibition. Unplugged is still, like all the works here, optimistic, but the artist took a much more visceral ride to get there.”

Above is the original book and the carbon remains following slow pyrolysis. The ‘book’ was then crushed and used in a home made water filter.

Unplugged install

Unplugged, 2018

Unplugged opening

Exhibition opening 7th July, 2018