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Archive for the ‘Applied Arts’ Category

Review of In from the Garden

In Applied Arts, Contemporary Art, Curatorial projects on 07/08/2009 at 1:25 AM

Damian Skinner writes: “The introductory wall text for this exhibition says that it is about two main issues: ‘the skilled terrain of craft practice’ that is related to, but not the same as, fine art; and the way in which Objectspace can intervene in the craft sector and support newish makers. The second appears to be the major impulse behind the show, with the text making it clear that ‘In from the garden is intended to look closer at four makers from around New Zealand who, currently at this period in their respective careers, are staying the course and readying to settle in for the long haul.’ The four are jewellers Renee Bevan and Victoria McIntosh, ceramist Blue Black, and sculptor/woodworker Ben Pearce.

Talking of practical things first: the show is nicely installed in the gallery. There is not a huge amount of work – I counted sixteen individual works, some of which are made up of groups of objects – and the gallery feels spacious, but it doesn’t feel underdone or empty, either. Sensibly I think the curator Matt Blomeley has recognised the conceptual and visual complexity of a lot of these objects, and given them plenty of space.”

For the full interview visit Skinner’s Paua Dreams website. Published 7 August 2009.

Handstand: Unfamiliar and Innovative Contemporary Jewellery

In Applied Arts, Commissioned writing, New Zealand Jewellery Showcase on 07/07/2009 at 10:46 PM

Notes on the Top Mark and Resene Award Winners

The first four years in a contemporary jewellery career is a pivotal time. Inevitable and obvious issues confront the maker head-on; finding gallery representation and supplying proven selling pieces, not to mention holding down a day job. These exterior aspects of a practice push and pull new makers in perhaps unexpected directions. Although by no means insurmountable, challenges like this serve to define the committed versus those who will inevitably fall off the radar. A small yet vibrant part of the visual arts sector, contemporary jewellery has grown exponentially in recent years and witnessed a number of New Zealand practitioners establishing national and international reputations. The makers showcased in Handstand provide a fantastic snapshot of just a few talents emerging out the handful of tertiary education programmes in this field, from around the country.


Top Mark Award winner Vaune Mason’s unique work, Control, stands out with its consideration of the jewellery wearer. An intriguing and nostalgic object, the work is not what you would consider typical jewellery. A vintage-looking object resembling a mourning jewellery locket, or a ‘box brownie’ camera, and finished with a sensible leather strap, the wearer of Mason’s work engages in a conceptual manner with the object. In choosing from a selection of portrait images, one of which then peers out of the lens-like porthole, the viewer is perhaps left to ponder; is this a metaphoric device providing us the ability to capture our mood (like a camera) or is it suggesting that one can choose who we mourn on any given day? The truth is slightly different, as the images are of Mason herself, who explains: “I have given over my physical identity as well as my ‘marks’ to this piece. The new owner, over whom I have no control, will be able to decide how I am viewed. They may never meet me in person, but with this piece, they can see an intimate side of me.” 


Second place in the Top Mark awards went to Vivien Atkinson, whose series Suite: Illusions addresses bridal jewellery. A universal symbol, the ‘bride’ is synonymous with beauty, purity and of course the always implied air of temporality. In transferring the fragile and undoubtedly highly skilled craft of cake decorating to jewellery, Atkinson engages directly with the discussion of adornment, an issue which resounds more strongly in contemporary jewellery than other art practices. 


Winner of the Resene Award, Jhana Miller’s The Charm Bracelet is a witty work which highlights our contemporary obsession with disposable consumer goods. This colourful collection of charms is ironically fashioned from the eminently more recyclable and un-jewellery-like medium of paper. 

By the time they have ‘made it’ those who thrive in contemporary jewellery can be considered successful as both fine artist and skilled craftsperson. The emphasis on craft skill is something which needs to be asserted here: skill, in combination with fresh ideas and cogent aesthetic explorations that is. As writer and curator Damian Skinner discusses in his essay (the publication accompanying Handstand will include essays by Damian Skinner and Kevin Murray), developing skill takes time. Skill of course cannot be acquired via a certificate and it takes many years of hard graft in the studio to – hopefully – master the nuances which add the indiscernible polish that can define a successful craft practice. These makers are proving beyond doubt that they are well on their way.

Matt Blomeley (2009 judge of the Top Mark and Resene awards)

HANDSTAND: Unfamiliar and Innovative Contemporary Jewellery
Exhibition dates: 16 – 19 July 2009
Sky City Convention Center
The New Zealand Jewellery Show
www.jewelleryshow.co.nz

Curator Peter Deckers (educator and established contemporary jeweller from Wellington) has brought together the Handstand exhibition, featuring the latest works from participating emerging jewellery artists in a variety of artistic styles and media.

In from the Garden

In Applied Arts, Commissioned writing, Contemporary Art, Curatorial projects, Objectspace on 21/05/2009 at 1:04 AM


“Half the interest of a garden is the constant exercise of the imagination. You are always living three, or indeed six, months hence. I believe that people entirely devoid of imagination never can be really good gardeners. To be content with the present, and not striving about the future, is fatal.” – Alice Morse Earle (1897)

Twentieth century German conceptual artist Joseph Beuys famously proclaimed “every man is an artist” and it seems that we have built upon this notion to include craft practice. It is perhaps easy to utilise Beuys’ statement as a truism for considering all creative practice as equivalent but the realities are much different. For the majority of us, one reminder from our time spent making is the sobering discovery that the vision and skills necessary to realize a well crafted object readily identifies the ‘amateur’ from the ‘auteur’.

Art, including craft is a barometer of the times, and as Alice Morse Earle observed, notable practice always looks to the future. Gleaning information about the practices of a new generation of contemporary craft artists, In from the Garden showcases four currently establishing makers who clearly have strived for the future, both creatively and professionally. These exhibitors, since emerging from their respective New Zealand tertiary arts programmes during the last half decade, have between them exhibited nationally and internationally, entering and winning awards and demonstrating capabilities as makers of artistically attuned craft.

There is a certain period in a creative practice where a maker has attained that fine balance between exhibiting and selling work, making a living and having time in the studio: i.e. the realities of professional creative practice. During this period, where there is often much more to achieve, there is a sense that an epochal work could be just around the corner. Objectspace has observed the opportunities and difficulties makers can encounter in establishing practices. With this in mind, In from the Garden is intended to look closer at four makers from around New Zealand who, currently at this period of their respective careers, are staying the course and readying to settle in for the long haul.

A new series of work by jeweller Renee Bevan goes by the boldly self-explanatory title, Blooming Big Brooches (2008-9). One can confidently claim that Bevan is currently obsessed with flowers. Bevan recalls, “I have long been fascinated with the pre-packaged emotive power of flowers; specifically the rose. Its manufactured sentimentality, vast symbolism and long-standing history in jewellery and adornment; the rose has a unique ability to speak of love, life and death all at the same time. Transforming imagery and materials already entrenched with an abundance of history and meaning I exaggerate and play on their existing connotations and suggestions.”

These brooches engage in a distinctive new conversation for Bevan regarding dimension, subject and adornment. Earlier in her career, Bevan was fascinated by pre-existing jewellery. A series of work entitled Lost and Found (2005) resulted from casting new works in precious metals as direct impressions from mass produced jewellery. (1)

This time around, Bevan has borrowed generic images of roses, the kind of images which proliferated in 1960s and ’70s gardening related publications. In these new works, the rose image is détourned, (2) cut-and-pasted to become sections of petals on successive layers of wood. The resulting brooches are kind of clunky yet elegant and not entirely disposed of their former glory.

Ceramic artist Blue Black is engaged in a practice which emerges from “an organized and ordered place to disorderly, freeplay chaos and back to organizing what happened.” Embodying these words, Black’s works arrive from the kiln as perlocutionary statements after this energetic and performative process as variously charred, colourful, grotesque and ultimately striking objects.

Blue Black’s work is refreshing at a time when it often seems every aspect of the craft process is over-investigated for relevance in order to be vindicated, sometimes stifling free expression. Black tackles expressive processes with relish explaining that “while my imaginings take a back seat the physical pleasure of the actions of making is the focus … My priority is finding my own rhythm and being swept along in the sensations of the body and materials, as if it is a performance.”

Through the study of expression, Black’s research forms an organic part of ceramic practice. Pushing clay around freely is championed and thus allowed to inform the artist’s thinking about modernist concepts like the sublime and the subconscious as something “produced from automatic emotional responses of the artist which can be perceived by the viewer.”

In Harm’s Way? (2008) is a central work for Jeweller Victoria McIntosh, who presents this installation with the quote, ”Primum non Nocere – First do no harm.” A maker of finely crafted individual works and installations, McIntosh’s work often seems to poke at the vagaries of how we each relate to objects and in the process of doing so emotionally attach ourselves to them, using this emotional resonance to draw meaning and define our notions of individual identity.

A provocation is deliberately set-up and ‘emotionally fractured’ in In Harm’s Way? by McIntosh. A collection of found and hand altered finely crafted objects are subjected to the notion of separation – a central idea in McIntosh’s practice, as an adoptee. In this work a framed found image depicts a mother and child. This image, with its cracked glass metaphorically separating the two intimate subjects, is installed beside a matching frame containing various objects. The words ‘Nature’ and ‘Nurture’ are finely embroidered onto the labels of two vintage lace collars, subtly embodying the dichotomy that may come to bear if we are separated from our genetic past.

Echoing Alice Morse Earle’s observation, McIntosh is concerned with the future, as she observes, “science moves us further away from the tried and tested methods of conception – I am left wondering the impact this will have on future generations. The concerns I have stem from my experience growing up as an adoptee without access or knowledge of my own genetic origins. This piece is a response to the new reproductive technologies and the ethical questions they raise for society as a whole.”

Ben Pearce’s practice illustrates the value of tinkering around in the studio with conceptual ideas and technical craft skills ready to be freely deployed. Pearce’s objects are predominantly of wood, which is minutely crafted and skillfully combines locally found objects and machine parts.

Pearce is inspired by memory and childhood. For Pearce childhood is a metaphor for the act of looking at something potentially unknown, as an adult. A recent work, 28 Various Preservations (2009) delved into this idea in depth, with Pearce noting “28 actual memories may be recalled and visited here, just one small section of a vast inter-related city. A City of desperation and adaptation, the forms are not eloquent or fancy, they take on a tree hut feel, that of ingenuity, as if constructed simply to perform a basic function of protection.”

Similar in some respects to Victoria McIntosh, Pearce is also interested in family history and genealogy but from a more general perspective. A recent work, Grandfather Clock (2009) “presents a window into the idea about the connections that we make and construct around an ancestor un-met. The pieced together nature of information that in-stills in us a type of familiarity of them, we wish to meet them face to face, stand in their air and time.”

The makers in In from the Garden emerged from educational programmes developed in the 1980s for an art sector which has evolved since then. A number of New Zealand tertiary institutions have expressed a reinvigorated level of enthusiasm towards craft in the two ensuing decades. This is in no small part due to the successes of a select group of New Zealand craft-aligned artists gaining international recognition. Some of these makers trained in the above programmes, along with mid-career makers who emerged earlier.

Accommodating for and building upon the interest in a small but vital and expanding field like contemporary craft requires not only innovative ideas but also forward thinking at an educational level. Despite certain regional strengths within disciplines of craft education, care is needed to develop and ensure existing programmes stay relevant. The perceived strength of craft programmes is on one level the opportunity for students to acquire craft skills and on another level the opportunity to refine their critical (fine art) acumen: there is often an issue with the balancing of these two dimensions. (3)

The four makers in this exhibition have established a strong case for the continued valuing of craft skill. Without a place to learn these skills, aspiring makers in craft disciplines have limited options outside of established community-based societies. It is a concern for many that some institutions are moving towards combined art and design programmes, where the balance between theory and practice does not address the distinctive nature of craft practice and the needs of emerging practitioners.

The context for making contemporary craft and art is an intimate occasion, drawing upon makers wants, needs and concerns and it is a natural conclusion that these makers are often drawn to the deepest recesses of their imagination. These unique vantage points are a rich source for rewarding and enlightening projects. Helping to redefine the parameters of contemporary craft and fine art practice, the makers featuring in In from the Garden demonstrate that they are “striving about the future”.

Matt Blomeley
28 May 2009

1. http://www.objectspace.org.nz/programme/works.php?documentCode=656 (26 May 2009)

2. A fine arts technique where imagery, or an object, is borrowed or reused to make a new work; often containing a different message than intended by the original author.

3. Jenkins, Douglas Lloyd, Volume: After The Makeover, keynote presentation, ‘Volume’ symposium, Hawkes Bay Museum and Art Gallery, Napier, 18 October 2008, http://www.hbmag.co.nz/item/volume_dlj.pdf (26 May 2009). Jenkins’ notes that this emphasis on degree credentials at the expense of skills is not limited to New Zealand and he quotes Jane Jacobs, who has cited a similar concern within the diploma system in Canadian community colleges.

Image – Ben Pearce, Home Alone No. 2, English Beech, English Walnut, Cotton, 2009, courtesy of the artist (image Peter Tang)

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What: In from the Garden curated by Matt Blomeley
Where: Objectspace, 8 Ponsonby Rd, Auckland
When: 6 June – 18 July, 2009
Gallery hours: Tues – Sat, 10am – 5pm. Free admission. A print publication for this exhibition is available from Objectspace.

Indian Fortunes: Bronwynne Cornish

In Applied Arts, Commissioned writing, Contemporary Art, Masterworks on 10/03/2009 at 9:26 PM


A favourite holiday novel of mine returned to several times over the years is set in an idylic university town. There is of course something asmiss with this place, not that many locals would even notice: a powerful spiritual presence lingers in the surrounding landscape. To the few who are destined to see it, this admirable yet malevolent looking character takes the form of a giant black domestic cat, cursed by a local witch to linger around the town and its surrounding hills. (1)
The spell which binds the old tomcat to the town is also an invisible leash, occasionally tripped over when visitors to the town and locals happen to cross his path. The central character in the story becomes entangled with the cat in this manner. She meets him again after passing to the ‘other side’ and, upon discovering his endless multitude of physical forms, has the following conversation with him: “ ‘Schrödinger’s cat!’ ‘That’s only a concept, more than that.’ Was it against the law of the universe for anything to be only what it seemed? ‘Nothing is against the law. The law is its own violation. That is the core of all events, that is Schrödinger’s cat.’“ (2)

Heavy dialogue for a popcorn novel, which no doubt passed right over my head as a teenager. I was surprised, in returning to the novel recently that it would actually have some relevance to me as an adult reader. The common superstition, explored in this novel, that we are predestined to a certain path (that can even account for when fortune or misfortune prevails upon us and we are confronted by our ethics in making decisions!) returned to me upon visiting Bronwynne Cornish’s ceramic studio and considering her most recent work.

Fortunate to undertake a 2008 residency in India, this experience has greatly influenced Cornish. Speaking about one of the repeating forms that is due to feature in her 2009 exhibition at Masterworks gallery, she relayed to me the story of a remarkable place in India, which she was unfortunately unable to visit first hand during her time there, for logistical and geographical reasons. In this place is a library that apparently holds a detailed pre-written record about anyone who wishes to know their path or fortune in life.

Cornish’s shapeshifting works, related to the story she told me – reminding me of the karmic premise as well as the imposing creature of my novel – are a series of six legged beings. Standing proud on four solid, powerful looking legs, their arms with palms cupped together servant-like hold forth your fortune cards. Although there is an overhanging air of mysticism to these works, Cornish is offering more than just an effigy of ethereal worlds and beings. Her investigation also concerns the present, the future, and our place in it.

The maker of ceramic objects which literally wear the skin of her subject(mysticism), like an unbiased contemporary theologian holding the subject of religion at arms length, Cornish explores in-depth and with an open mind the desperation with which we sometimes cling to beliefs and presumptions that have been held for millenia, all the while looking for underlying questions. The questions, and possibly answers, that Cornish is posing with these works are deliberately left open for the eyes and minds of the viewer to ponder and decode, as she is not presumptuous enough to suggest otherwise.

Of any subject or idea that comes to mind upon considering Cornish’s new works, perhaps the most important is the notion of Self. Philosopher Slavoj Žižek observes that “if we penetrate the surface of any an organism and look deeper and deeper into it, we never encounter some central controlling element that would be its Self, secretly pulling the strings of its organs … there is effectively no self … A true human Self functions, in a sense, like a computer screen: what is “behind” it is nothing but a network of “selfless” neuronal machinery.” (3)

To know that ones Self is not governed by something other pulling its ‘strings’ is refreshing, yet it does not negate the enjoyment of lyrical objects, which often engage in a language that predates western science and philosophy. Cornish’s works operate interestingly and fluently in this context; contemporary objects – enjoying a growing, appreciative audience – in an age where it is more common to see artists exploring science and genetics than pre-European belief systems.

Bronwynne Cornish’s years of pushing clay through her fingers are combined with intriguing ideas and relevant subjects to make a convincing artistic statement, reminding one that we each exist as a conflation of our bloodlines and our learned experiences. As Žižek notes, “what makes me “unique” is neither my genetic formula nor the way my dispositions were developed due to the influence of the environment but the unique self-relationship emerging out of the interaction between the two.” (4)

Matt Blomeley
8 March 2009

Essay commissioned for Bronwynne Cornish’s upcoming exhibition Horn, Beak and Claw at Masterworks)

1. Strieber, Whitley, Cat Magic, Grafton, London, 1988.
2. Ibid. (pp323,324)
3. Žižek, Slavoj, Organs Without Bodies, Routledge, New York and London, 2004. (pp117,118)
4. Ibid. (pp118)

Renee Bevan’s ‘Blooming Big Brooches’

In Applied Arts, Commissioned writing, Object Magazine on 06/03/2009 at 3:32 AM


A recent series of work, by New Zealand jeweller Renee Bevan, goes by the boldly self-explanatory title of Blooming Big Brooches. One can confidently claim that Bevan is currently obsessed with flowers, “specifically the rose; its manufactured sentimentality, vast symbolism and its long-standing history in jewellery and adornment.” These brooches, soon to be exhibited at Inform Contemporary Jewellery in Christchurch, engage in a distinctive new conversation regarding dimension, subject and adornment. Renee Bevan is at the forefront of a new generation in Australasian jewelers. Having graduated in 2002, her work has been featured in a number of important exhibitions at institutional project spaces and dealer gallery’s over the past few years, culminating in her selection for the international jewellery exhibition, “Schmuck 2008”.

Image: “Bill Riley wearing Blooming Big Rose Brooch,” courtesy Renee Bevan

Matt Blomeley, 6 March 2009

Kate Barton: 2D/3D

In Applied Arts on 12/02/2009 at 9:48 PM


This window installation for Objectspace embodies a form of duality, in both a literal and a critical sense. Kate Barton studied as a contemporary jeweller before following this up with studies in animation. Fittingly, Barton’s work often manages to extrapolate one into the other, despite the sometimes restrictive specificity and material concerns of these different practices.

Comprising modular, often rectilinear forms, there is a particular softness in the way Barton’s jewellery bends and adapts to the wearer’s body. The artist notes that these works “resemble both the aesthetic of half finished buildings, steel skeletons exposed, and fragile spider webs with multifaceted, slightly different angles glinting.”

An effigy of the jewellery in the installation, Barton’s animations (also featured in the installation) describe, in a very analog manner, how she thinks about and visualizes object making. The animations illustrate how her jewellery objects are designed to move and encapsulate space. In effect this is privileging the viewer to the “3D object caught in the 2D plane of paper and ink”, statically jumping and moving: embodying the potential that only the jewellery wearer can unlock.

Kate Barton is an Auckland based artist. Image courtesy of Objectspace.

Two new Objectspace installations to check out

In Applied Arts on 15/01/2009 at 9:03 PM

Best In Show 2009

Best In Show is Objectspace’s fifth annual exhibition in a series which showcases a handpicked selection of outstanding craft and design graduates. The Best In Show format has proven itself to be an important event within the annual craft and design exhibition calendar and Objectspace is proud to have represented a range of new voices over the last five editions of Best In Show. The fourteen exhibitors in this year’s exhibition encompass the exciting and varied terrain of spatial, graphic and textile design along with ceramics, jewellery and object art installation.

Previous Best In Show exhibitors have moved on to win design awards and competitions, establish themselves within their chosen fields and some are already moving into roles as mentors and teachers. If there is a theme or feeling that stands out among these fourteen exhibitors in 2009, it is that critical engagement is positioned foremost within their varied practices in conceiving and making intelligent objects.

Jacqui Chan’s Exotic Blend

A reflection upon cross cultural heritage, Jacqui Chan’s Exotic Blend signifies her desire, as a contemporary jeweller, to embody the particular form of chinoiserie endemic to her New Zealand upbringing.

The artist notes that “growing up initially in bicultural Whakatane and later the homogenous Pakeha-dominant South Island, there was little reflection of our Chinese half in life outside our home. It was therefore somewhat natural that our sense of Chineseness became entwined with domestic objects. Rice pattern bowls, our Chinese teapot, painted fans, shitake mushrooms, and the mahjong set were day-to-day evidence of our cultural heritage and imagery with which to imagine China.”

With this body of work Chan was drawn to tea tins for the symbolism they engender. The exotic imagery depicted in tea tins is, she observes, equally distant from modern China as it is from England. Cut up, pierced, folded and tricked into wearable brooch forms, the tea tin is reclaimed by the artist.

Jacqui Chan is a New Zealand artist. Trained as an architect and then a jeweller, she will be undertaking doctoral studies in Australia from 2009.

‘Special Needs’ post at Paua Dreams

In Applied Arts, Contemporary Art on 01/12/2008 at 11:33 PM

Moyra Elliott just informed me of an excellent post on Damian Skinner’s Paua Dreams website that I’d almost missed the last time I was checking out his site. In his post, Skinner addresses the issue of craft artist representation within the contemporary art world. The answers to this problem are definitively buried within the scope of each craft discipline and it does appear, as Skinner points out, that jewellers are currently playing the contemporary ‘art game’ more successfully than ceramists, glass and textiles artists.

As Skinner illustrates, the issue is relatively simple: with the exception of several contemporary art galleries that represent a select few jewellery makers, craft focused dealer galleries – the predominant exhibiting venue for jewellers – in NZ are usually a little out of tune with the workings of the contemporary art system. I won’t be surprised when when a ‘maker’ breaks through to Walters-type acclaim, but in the current climate it’s more than likely that it won’t be someone singled out from a craft gallery exhibition alone.

Sarah Sadd of Masterworks may have had to feel Skinner’s heat in relation to this issue (refer to the post), but Damian is in no way discriminating against the importance of galleries such as Masterworks. I can’t think of a better way to describe the current situation as when he summarises: “Either craft plays the fine art game so it can be eligible for the Walters Prize, or the Walters Prize (and the art world that sustains it) is transformed and old hierarchies are dismantled. To imagine otherwise is naïve, and that just gives fine art another reason not to take craft seriously.”

Volume Contemporary Craft/Object Symposium

In Applied Arts, Contemporary Art, Design, Talks/lectures on 24/10/2008 at 4:06 AM

Volume, for everyone who missed it, was a great excuse to head for the Hawkes Bay. Highlights were Justin Paton’s keynote, the Sunday craft market, which I left with a wallet lighter but with a handful of small works by Lex Dawson, Paul Maseyk and Ross Mitchell Anyon, and being invited to share my notes onstage as part of a selection of eight professional colleagues presenting examples of contemporary makers and practices to keep an eye on.

Best In Show 2008

In Applied Arts, Commissioned writing, Contemporary Art, Curatorial projects, Design, Objectspace on 02/02/2008 at 2:02 AM


The fourth annual exhibition in this ongoing series at Objectspace, Best In Show 2008 features makers from a selection of New Zealand’s design and craft tertiary education programmes. For anyone interested in learning more about these makers a print publication is available from Objectspace (also available as a pdf download). Image courtesy of Scott Facer and Objectspace.

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