Archive for the ‘Tertiary’ Category

THIS MUST BE THE PLACE | ARTISTS TALKS

Wednesday, July 11th, 2012

 

Chris Ryan

There is a wintery stillness beauty about the AUT University St Paul Street Gallery buildings. It is almost 1pm and people are arriving to hear an artists talk.

In the wing of the gallery the emerging artists Louisa Afoa, Cordelle Feau, Anita Jacobsen, Alana Lopesi, Limi Manu, Chris Ryan, Talia Smith, Salome Tanuvasa, Aaron Unasa and Cora-Allan Wickliffe begin to discuss their work to the attentive crowd.

Cordelle Feau

The artists and crowd are lucky, senior artist Shigeyuki Kihara is in attendance. She is here specifically to hear the artists talk about their work and she is able to provide the students with insights that only come from experience.

Aaron Unasa

This Must Be The Place is the fifth annual Tautai Contemporary Pacific Arts Trust tertiary exhibition. This year it is curated by the young and talented Jeremy Leatinu’u. Jeremy himself exhibited in the 2009 tertiary exhibition Don’t Pacify Me. Each year a young artist/curator is offered the opportunity to curate this exhibition as a way of trying to attract more pacific curators into curatorial roles.

 

Louisa AfoaThe exhibition is only one part of the professional development that the ten young artists receive. Earlier in the day a closed critique session with art writer Mark Amery and artist Graham Fletcher was held within the university gallery. The exhibition project also offers the student/artists the opportunity to make connections with their peers attending different tertiary institutions and to expand on their networks.

As a reflection of place and time, This Must Be The Place presents a very firm awareness of location and identity within the Pacific.

ALANA LOPESI

 

THIS MUST BE THE PLACE | OPENING NIGHT

Wednesday, July 11th, 2012

 

Dance_sml2

The formalities of the event were drawing to a close but the audience were captivated as the large crowd that had come to the opening night of the fifth annual Tautai Contemporary Pacific Arts Trust exhibition watched the dance performance choreographed by Sesilia Pusiaki Tatuila, the 2012 Pacific Dance Artist in Residence.

 

Crowd

The 200 plus crowd made up of art viewers and lovers joined the families and friends of the artists who had braved the cold winter night to be in attendance at the AUT ST Paul Street Gallery and be amongst the first to view the aptly named This Must Be The Place.

Within the confines of the large university gallery a collection of ten emerging artists must seem a little more at ease having reached opening night. The students completing their art based graduate and post-graduate studies include Louisa Afoa, Cordelle Feau, Anita Jacobsen, Alana Lopesi, Limi Manu, Chris Ryan, Talia Smith, Salome Tanuvasa, Aaron Unasa and Cora-Allan Wickliffe.

Three months prior all Auckland based tertiary students of Pacific heritage who were interested in being included in the show, could submit a proposal of their work for consideration by young curator Jeremy Leatinu’u.

 

Chris Ryan & Talia Smith

This Must Be The Place includes a range of mediums from photography, installation, sculpture and moving image all made this year.

This Must Be The Place showcases the work of ten tertiary art students who confidently journey the challenging physical and conceptual landscapes of postcolonial New Zealand. Exploring the reconstruction of place and culture through colonisation and migration their works reveal the politics and subjectivities of being Pacific Island in Auckland, Aotearoa/New Zealand.

Salome Tanuvasa examines her surrounding environment where urban development is taking place, in a large video installation.

A 120-page document lists Maori and English names given to locales in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Cordelle Feau has methodically crossed out all English place names in black vivid.

Alana Lopesi makes available to the public written material addressing concerns raised by many Pacific people living in Aotearoa/New Zealand.

Cordelle Feau

Through a photographic installation, Talia Smith explores the traces, marks, memories and histories left on public and private spaces.

Anita Jacobsen attempts to capture a sense of reality and be autobiographical with her photographic work.

Utilising moving image Louisa Afoa discusses the politics of language, contemporary visual appearance and the role of social media.

Limi Manu discusses themes of unease and isolation through intricate wall drawings and sculpture.

 

Cora Allan Wickliffe

Artist Aaron Unasa fuses a range of discarded commercial products to create contemporary interpretations of traditional cultural items.

Everyday domestic objects are made apparent and become reflections of cultural heritage and personal experiences for Chris Ryan.

Referencing our collected history, Cora-Allan Wickliffe binds traditional practices with a contemporary twist.

As a reflection of place and time, This Must Be The Place presents a very firm awareness of location and identity within the Pacific.

Finding Neitherland: Artist and curators talk

Monday, August 8th, 2011

Photo Credit: Marlaina Key and Simon Ashforth

Special thanks to Auckland based multimedia artist Melanie Rands for her performance.

Finding Neitherland: Opening

Monday, August 8th, 2011

PHOTO CREDIT: Dr Melissa Laing,  St Paul St Gallery

Finding Neitherland, curator’s essay

Tuesday, July 26th, 2011

Finding Neitherland, or, the fine art of not giving a shit.

 

You must travel at random, like the first Mayans; you risk getting lost in the thickets, but that is the only way to make art.[1]

—Robert Smithson

 

I was killing time in a local bookstore recently, skimming through the art and design magazines, when a magazine that I would ordinarily pass over caught my eye. Although I’m not the target demographic for FRANKIE, which appears to focus on contemporary craft, DIY fashion, and Indie music, aimed at the 20+ shabby-chic and thriftily inclined home crafter, I nevertheless flicked through the pages and found myself stopping at an article that posed the big question: What is Cool? The question piqued my interest. After all, in an age of planking, avatars and nano-second attention spans, how can one possibly define what is cool today, tomorrow, or next week for that matter?

The article opens with an image of the indifferent but oh so cool James Dean and a categorical capitalised statement by one of the four contributing writers: ‘YOU KNOW WHAT REALLY DEFINES COOL? FOUR WORDS: NOT GIVING A SHIT.’[2] Indeed. The remainder of the article doesn’t really live up to the promise of the heading, but it did succeed in getting me thinking that somehow this no nonsense mantra could be useful as a methodological framework for defining one’s image, lifestyle or chosen profession. I mean, doesn’t everyone want to be cool, especially artists?

As an adolescent, coolness for me was embodied in TV and movie characters like the Fonze, Bodie and Doyle, and Han Solo. Throughout my teenage years, coolness was defined by the music we listened to, and you couldn’t go wrong with Bob Marley, Debbie Harry, or Talking Heads. Artists I thought were cool during my undergrad years at Unitec were Julian Schnabel and David Salle. It’s hard for me to distinguish now whether I thought the works were cool, or the artists; probably both, though many would argue that the sun no longer shines on either of them. Who cares – I’m sure they don’t.

Perhaps being cool has something to do with being casual, in that ‘w-h-a-t-e-v-e-r, I don’t give a shit’ sort of way. A new casualness for a new dawn perhaps? Not exactly a new idea, but one that I think deserves more scrutiny. The idea of casualness in artistic practice, specifically painting, was discussed in a conversation between Bernhard Mendes Bürgi and Thierry de Duve which was published in the book Painting on the Move (2002). Bürgi proposed casualness as a panacea for painting’s ailment in the wake of modernism: ‘Painting has had to free itself of all its ideological superstructures’ he argued, and also ‘of its pathos of the absolute; it has had to find a new casualness, obviously by risking a triviality which includes no obligations, no commitment.’[3]

In Bürgi’s view the ideological dimension of painting, those qualities that are regarded by many to give the work of art meaning, substance, and value, is secondary to the aesthetic impetus for its creation:

The best painters don’t let their ideas, their ideals, their political or metaphysical beliefs, interfere with their practice. Brush in hand, a good painter wants to be a painter and nothing else, even if he feels flattered in his sense of self-pride by the mission of saving the world that the surrounding culture lends to him. The ethic of the artist resides in respect for his medium, and the decisions he takes are aesthetic and technical. When you see the ideological decision taking the upper hand in a work over the aesthetic decision, the work is almost always mediocre.[4]

Bürgi’s words struck a chord with me because when I look back at my own practice, as an artist of dual Samoan and European heritage, the works I have created until recently have largely been located within a post-colonial discourse, and imbued with ‘messages’ of social disharmony and cultural marginalisation. With hindsight, I have discovered that at times ‘ideological’ decisions have overtaken ‘aesthetic’ decision-making in my practice as a painter. It isn’t that I regret that this is so (life’s too short for such regrets), or that I no longer stand behind my earlier paintings, but that I now recognise that the act of mark making itself must take precedence over the ‘content’ of the marks.

When I was invited to curate the fourth annual tertiary exhibition of the Tautai Contemporary Pacific Arts Trust, showcasing the work of Pacific artists selected from five Auckland tertiary institutions, I thought long and hard about what exhibition framework would best suit the diverse group of exhibitors. What curatorial concept would, on the one hand, acknowledge that these are emergent artists of Pacific descent, but on the other hand, not force them to take an ideological position in relation to their cultural background?

Firstly, I wanted to find a framework in which the artists might take up Bürgi’s challenge to ‘find a new casualness’ by dispensing with any notion of ‘trying to save the world’ with a brush, camera, hammer, scissors, video recorder, etc. in hand. Certainly, there’s no disputing Bürgi’s point that every artist wants to be the best at what they do. The difficulty, it seems, is how to achieve that by cultivating casualness in our art.

Fortunately, de Duve suggests a couple of historical precedents to give us some idea about how we might go about it. Picasso’s casualness, he contends, could be characterised by his total absence of remorse. Matisse’s casualness was of a different sort, de Duve continues, whereby a finished painting must seem absolutely effortless and spontaneous, appearing fully formed at first attempt, even when, in reality, it was the result of extensive retouching.[5]

Robert Ryman, in conversation with Robert Storr, revealed that he is another adherent of cultivated casualness in painting: ‘The one quality that I look for and I think is in all good painting, is that it has to look as if no struggle was involved. It has to look as if it was the most natural thing – it just happened and you don’t have to think about how it happened.’[6]

We should assume, of course, that casualness extends to art forms beyond the sable stick, and if we extrapolate further, could we not consider casualness more generally as a personality trait, or even a lifestyle choice? Would it be too great a leap to argue that Pacific peoples, myself included, mightn’t already make a virtue out of manifesting casualness? I mean, how did the term ‘PI time’ come about!? If there is any truth to this stereotype, then Pacific artists should be able to manufacture casualness by the kava-bowl load!

The primary objective in encouraging the pursuit of casualness in the work of this group of emergent artists, however, was not to trade on an old stereotype; it was the hope that it would allow the artists to foreground their work on its own terms. In short, I wanted to devise an exhibition framework that would showcase the work of a group of Pacific Island artists while temporarily disrupting the post-colonial superstructure. The aim was to encourage the participants to construct their own Utopia free of remorse or struggle. After a good deal of thought, I arrived at the idea of a concept space called ‘Neitherland’.

This curatorial position that attempts to negotiate the balancing act between aesthetics and ideology is indebted to Roland Barthes concept, ‘Neither-Norism,’ from his collection of essays, Mythologies (1957). Barthes coined the term to explain a mythological figure through which two opposites are balanced, one against the other, in order to reject them both:

It is on the whole a bourgeois figure, for it relates to a modern form of liberalism. We find again here the figure of the scales: reality is first reduced to analogues; then it is weighed; finally, equality having been ascertained, it is got rid of. Here also there is magical behaviour: both parties are dismissed because it is embarrassing to choose between them; one flees from an intolerable reality, reducing it to two opposites which balance each other only inasmuch as they are purely formal, relieved of all their specific weight… one no longer needs to choose, but only to endorse.[7]

The application of Barthes ‘neither-nor’ theory does, for all intents and purposes, release ones practice from ideological superstructures—whether socially, politically, or culturally encoded. Needless to say, this strategy doesn’t preclude ideological matters out of hand if an artist’s ideological position is embedded in his or her art and is clearly the product of a logical progression. That being said, however, in issuing the artist’s with my curatorial brief I am mindful of Bürgi’s warning that the liberation of the artist from an ideological context carries with it the risk of triviality.

I am, nonetheless, proposing that these young Pacific Island artists negotiate this exhibition at AUT’s St Paul St Gallery as a concept space that is neither here nor there, but should be thought of as a mythological place of unlimited scope and potential. Finding Neitherland is about the act of discovering something within the terrain of neither-norism. What that ‘something’ is, I have left to the artists to discern for themselves. I can hear now echoes of Jameson’s lament against historical deafness and random cannibalisation. Too bad. My curatorial directive is clear: go Mayan and ‘get lost in the thickets’, manifest ‘casualness’ and ‘don’t give a shit’ because, rest assured, everyone else will be doing it for you soon enough.

Graham Fletcher

 

Graham Fletcher is a painter who has exhibited extensively in both New Zealand and abroad and whose works are held in significant private and public collections. He has a Doctor of Fine Arts degree from The University of Auckland and is a Board member of Tautai Contemporary Pacific Arts Trust. He lives and works in Auckland.

 


[1] Robert Smithson, “Incident of Mirror-Travel in the Yucatan,” Jack Flam, ed. Robert Smithson: The Collected Writings, (Los Angeles: University of California Press) 119.

[2] Marieke Hardy, “What Is “Cool”?” Frankie, March/April 2011. 77.

[3] “A Century of Contemporary Painting: A conversation between Bernhard Mendes Bürgi and Thierry de Duve”, B. M. Bürgi and P. Pakesch, Painting on the Move (Basel: Kunstmuseum Basel, 2002) 38.

[4] Bürgi 39.

[5] Bürgi 40.

[6] Bürgi 37.

[7] Roland Barthes, Mythologies, trans. Annette Lavers (New York: Hill & Wang, 1972) 153.

Don’t Pacify Me: Works and artist statements

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

 

 

Photography courtesy of Aubrey Rodriguez

Don’t Pacify Me: Artist Poem

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

I AM! or AM I

    AM I  less …because I can’t stand corned beef?

    AM I  less …because KFC makes me sick?

    AM I  less …because I don’t play rugby?

     AM I  less …because I question the village council?

     AM I  less …because I laugh at the church leaders?

     AM I  less …because I can’t stand the ministers hypocracy

       AM I  less …because I am not patient while they shaft us?

       AM I  less …because I can’t take the one hour on Sunday?    

       AM I  less …because I question it when they take 20 hours of my                                                   weeks pay?

     AM I  less …  because I can’t stand by, let them pacify me and not say a                                         word?

      AM I  even ..  Samoan?

by Siliga David Setoga

Don’t Pacify Me: Curatorial Statement

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

As a new curator ‘Don’t Pacify Me’ began as an opportunity to explore the current condition and direction of contemporary Pacific art: is it moving away from the ‘frangipani’ of yesterday and perhaps even the Pasifika legends of our current urban locale. Are the emerging artists pushing boundaries within the contemporary Pacific art world, following our contemporary predecessors and I if so, in what way and what are their new points of reference?

‘Don’t Pacify Me’ exhibits the artistic persuasions of eighteen senior Pacific student artists. Exhibited are varying concepts explored through different art practices, such as the politics of public space addressed in moving image work; stratagems of the painting process painstakingly painted, whilst the mundane object is elevated in a devoted effort of 100 + drawings; time, space and the memories in between are explored in thoughtful installations; a perceptive sculpture transcends the third dimension; familiar urban sites are exhibited through photography and translations of pattern and material culture through 1:1 installations. These emerging artists present a wider palette than what is currently understood thematically and to some extent aesthetically as Pacific art.

So how do we correspond to atypical work produced by artists of Pacific ancestry? Firstly acknowledge that artistic change is inevitable since it naturally correlates with the evolution of culture itself. In time, further discussions may need to inform what actually determines Pacific art as a movement: is it the Pacific aesthetic, thought or agency? For now the exemplary work of these artists speak for itself: ‘Don’t Pacify Me’.  As both an entreaty and a demand, this title came after discussions with artists and is my perspective of the message. This dual statement rejects cultural art/artist stereotyping and reciprocally demands recognition simply as a fine artist.

Undeniably cultural identity is an advantageous point of difference for artists, yet for many this may become negotiable when considering vocational bearings in a wider art society. Furthermore the radical nature of the creative is to escape the predictable, which in this instance can be the Pacific Island cultural box. ‘Don’t Pacify Me’ empathizes with this on-going dilemma and asks today’s artists to explain who they are and their realities as artists.

With gratitude to Tautai Trust, St. Paul Street gallery it is an honor to present ‘Don’t Pacify Me’: the enlightening work of eighteen artists. Their loaded messages implore us to not assume but first give them space to demarcate an artistic existence that is then to be reckoned with.

Charmaine ‘Ilaiu

Curator

Don’t Pacify Me opens Thursday 25 June 2009

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

dontpacifymeposterfinal1

Strengthening Sennit: artist talks

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

The first in a series of events held during the week of the Tertiary exhibition. The artist speakers were Linda Tanoai (AUT, Master year 1) , Juliana Satchell (Unitec, BFA year2) and Sevuloni Tora (UNITEC, BFA year2) in conversation with Nina Tonga, art history lecturer at the University Of Auckland.