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Archive for 2011|Yearly archive page

Why Milan? exhibition

In Curatorial projects, Design, Objectspace, Urbis Magazine on 13/05/2011 at 10:29 PM

Salvage stool by Tim Wigmore for Designtree

I finished up at Objectspace yesterday after four and a half years as programme co-ordinator, working on many fantastic projects with tons of amazing people. Why Milan? New Zealand designers reflect was my last project in this role and it was co curated with Urbis magazine editor Nicole Stock. The exhibition runs until 4 June 2011 and features the following seven designers who have shown at Milan design week over the last seven years: Phil Cuttance, Designtree, Roderick Fry, Simon James, Punga and Smith, David Trubridge, Well Groomed Fox. My exhibition text panel follows:

Why Milan? New Zealand designers reflect is a collaborative exhibition project and magazine feature presented by Objectspace and Urbis magazine. The exhibition is an opportunity to see a selection of works that seven leading New Zealand designers have chosen to take to the prestigious Milan design week – arguably the biggest design fair in the world – over the last seven years, to showcase their work to an international audience.

Why Milan? is also an opportunity to hear the exhibitor’s assessments on the value of showing at a very high profile international event that annually attracts the design world’s elite. Collectively their reflections provide valuable insights for the local design community and other New Zealand designers setting out to position themselves within the international market. David Trubridge, a regular exhibitor at Milan design week over the last ten years, says ‘Milan is by far the best place to build reputation in the design world because it attracts all the international press as well as buyers and dealers.’

All of the exhibitors in this exhibition realise the potential value of showing their work internationally, although it is somewhat inevitable that the considerable costs involved in travelling, shipping work and exhibiting at a major commercial event create a lot of pressure. Designer Simon James says, ‘it was a huge learning curve in terms of setting up the correct business model for New Zealand exports.’

So is there is a catch? Although Milan design week is undoubtedly a great opportunity for emerging and establishing designers, some say Milan design week is becoming overrun with big budget commercial projects that threaten to swamp the smaller name designers. Partly for this reason, Trubridge says his time showing in Milan is nearly up, ‘it is very expensive and I think that now there are better ways that I can use that promotion budget … creativity is delicate precious flower that blooms in free spaces. It does not survive bombast or power games.’

What does become clear is that New Zealand designers are currently very highly regarded internationally and it is obvious that this is in part due to some of the designers featured in this exhibition. Of course, to survive and to thrive in the current market both locally and internationally, designers have to stay on the ball. Perhaps most important of all in the current economic climate is maintaining a sense of optimism and an absence of self doubt. This is suggested by Phil Cuttance, who, when asked if New Zealand can keep up with the international heavyweights says, ‘yeah, of course, we are our own worst enemies.’

The Art of Engagement

In Uncategorized on 02/02/2011 at 11:05 PM

Natalia Milosz-Pieraska (image credit: Kim Brockett)

Contemporary jewellers, Kristin D’Agostino and Raewyn Walsh have recently curated and installed a fantastic exhibition at Objectspace, featuring twenty nine exciting contemporary jewellery makers from around Australia and New Zealand. The exhibition is scheduled to run until 26 February 2011, at the Objectspace Window Gallery space.

The curators write: “New Zealand and Australia seem like natural allies. Both counties were colonized by the ‘motherland’, and both are geographically isolated from the self-proclaimed jewellery epicenter – Europe. Yet despite some historical exchanges, and past trans-tasman exhibitions, long lasting jewellery relations remain relegated to a series of ‘almost-rans’. Is the work incompatible? Are our cultural experiences too disparate to allow any meaningful connections?

Back in October 2010, an exhibition of work by fifteen NZ jewellers went to Sydney, Australia under the moniker Touch, Pause, Engage. This time around, the work of fourteen Australian jewellers sits alongside the New Zealand fifteen in an effort to compare and contrast current jewellery practices and to see if we are running on an even playing field.

Touch, Pause, Engage was originally intended to offer the Australian community a glimpse into the Contemporary Jewellery scene in Aotearoa, New Zealand, and to reset the trans-Tasman rivalry between our rugby-loving brothers and sisters. Known primarily as the call the referee shouts before two rugby teams lock into a scrum, Touch, Pause, Engage, re-presented at Objectspace as The Art of Engagement, has now become an invitation for artists to converse through jewellery, as well as a call to audiences to interact with the work in both its physical and conceptual manifestations.”

Best in Show 2011 publication

In Applied Arts, Best in Show, Commissioned writing, Curatorial projects, Design, Objectspace on 24/01/2011 at 3:45 AM

Best in Show 2011, 29 January – 24 February, now has a digital publication which you can download here from Objectspace.

Best in Show 2011 publication

Best in Show 2011

In Applied Arts, Best in Show, Curatorial projects, Design, Objectspace, Threaded Magazine on 18/01/2011 at 10:46 PM

Best in Show 2011

The Best in Show exhibition series is an annual fixture in the Objectspace calendar. Inaugurated in 2005, the aim is to showcase Objectspace’s selection of talented emerging applied arts graduates from tertiary institutions around New Zealand.  Areas of practice covered in 2011 by these ‘diamonds in the rough’ include graphic design, digital design, textiles, ceramics, contemporary jewellery and furniture.

These sixteen bachelor-level graduates display a consistent level of polish that belies the relatively limited amount of time spent in their respective fields.  Each of the exhibitors displays either a limited edition, one-off, or specialist type of production and this often entails few compromises when it comes to construction materials, aesthetic decisions and other artistic concerns.  Some of the concepts addressed include: the energy within objects; randomness; contrasts and purposes within natural materials; popular traditions; class; graffiti; commercial branding; digital communication; apocalypse; ruins; obsolescence; nurturing; growth; and the visual language of experimental music.

Best in Show 2011 features graduates from: AUT University (Te Wānanga Aronui o Tāmaki Tāmaki Makaurau), Hungry Creek Art and Craft School, Manukau School of Visual Arts (Te Whare Takiura o Manukau), Massey University (Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa), Unitec (Te Whare Wānanga o Wairaka), Whitireia (Te Kura Matatini o Whitireia). The exhibition will feature a major print feature in collaboration with Threaded Magazine.

What: Best In Show 2011

Where: Objectspace, 8 Ponsonby Rd, Auckland

When: Saturday 29 January – Thursday 24 February 2011.

Gallery hours: Mon – Sat, 10am – 5pm. Free admission.

Objective lessons: a review of the 2010 Objectspace programme

In Applied Arts, Commissioned writing, Objectspace on 18/01/2011 at 8:58 PM

On 14 December 2010 I wrote a review of the 2010 Objectspace programme:

“It is nearly seven years since Objectspace opened its doors at 8 Ponsonby Road. In the ensuing time frame, this small non-profit presenting institution, largely funded through Creative New Zealand along with a variety of sponsors and private donors, has consistently pursued and sharpened its mandate to talk about and showcase applied arts practice in New Zealand. Presenting an ever growing core audience with frequently changing exhibitions supported by an award winning publications programme, web archive, as well as regular talks and lecture events, these experiences and perspectives are clearly reflected in the organisation’s current purpose statement: ‘To position making – principally in the fields of craft, applied arts and design – within a range of cultural, economic and social frameworks in order to provoke new assessments about the making, functioning and value of works and practices.’…

Read the rest here.

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