Ann Shelton, Tracy Keith And Essi Airisniemi
Her thick old skin
22 April 2021 - 15 May 2021 ![]() Contemporary narratives of disrupted ecologies meet ancient mythologies in this exhibition of threee artists whose work, in the age of the anthropocene and human induced climate change, invokes a Gaian sensibility of an ancient earth mother rising to protect her terrain from exploitation.
Overlaying the complexity of these conceptual underpinnings are visually charismatic, carefully crafted surfaces, which serve to seduce consideration of the ways nature intersects with human knowledge and belief systems. The exhibition includes works from Ann Shelton's series the missionaries - a multi-layered examination of the plants brought to Aotearoa by early settlers. Writer Emil McAvoy has described these plants as "photogenic ambassadors... envoys without clear knowledge of the impact of their arrival -- colonists without a game plan." Transported into a new and very different land in the southern seas, the plants responded in unanticipated ways. Shelton, who is an established artist and Honorary Research Fellow in Photography at Whiti o Rehua, School of Art, Massey University, has long been interested in plant histories and their relationship to power structures. She grows most of the plants she employs and creates all the arrangements in her hyper-real large-scales portraits drawing here on the arts and crafts movement which developed in the mid-19th century UK in response to industrialization. Tracy Keith produces distinctive raku-fired vessels and sculptures. With their sense of dystopian industry, weathered surfaces and splashes of intense and vibrant colours drawn from deep in the earth, they speak to alternative paradigms embedded in sci-fi and fantasy genres of film and literature. Poneke based, Keith (Ngā Puhi) employs uku, clay, to awaken a nascent awareness of how far humankind has moved from the pure and primeval place where people once lived in "the close and perpetual embrace of Papatūānuku (mother-earth)". Keith has a Master of Fine Arts from the Whitecliff College of Art and Design. We are delighted to introduce the work of Essi Airisniemi, a Finnish artist who is resident in Wellington, following the completion of a Master in Fine Arts at Massey University in 2018. Airisniemi draws on Finnish folk lore and traditional knowledge of plants and forest ecologies, informed by a feminist reading of the characters in the old stories, particularly around the Finnish goddess of the forests. Working predominantly in plywood, she creates cut-out forms of plants and female characters that stand freely or are suspended in space, and navigate between the ancient and 'modern', the fairy and the scientific, the natural and constructed. Shape-shifting and ideas of transformation and metamorphosis are central interests in her practice. Show more
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The Banshee, Golden Wattle (Acacia pycnantha)
The Banshee, Golden Wattle (Acacia pycnantha) 2017 The Governess, Darwin's Barberry (Berberis darwinii)
The Governess, Darwin's Barberry (Berberis darwinii) 2017 Tangy on the tongue
2021 Essi Airisniemi painted cut plywood 1440 x 390 mm SOLD Tangy on the tongue 2021 Essi Airisniemi painted cut plywood 1440 x 390 mm SOLD The Dowager, Pine (Pinus radiata)
The Dowager, Pine (Pinus radiata) 2017 The Seamstress, Dock (Rumex obtusifolius L)
The Seamstress, Dock (Rumex obtusifolius L) 2017 Sienna desert
Sienna desert 2021 Her thick old skin
Her thick old skin 2021 Astral body
Astral body 2021 Atua of the forest
Atua of the forest 2021 Lava Flow
Lava Flow 2021 Magma flow
Magma flow 2021 Lament for Tāne-mahuta
Lament for Tāne-mahuta 2021 Celestial chalice
Celestial chalice 2021 Asteroid fragment
Asteroid fragment 2021 Tui vessel
2021 Tracy Keith raku fired ceramic 175 x 275 mm SOLD Tui vessel 2021 Tracy Keith raku fired ceramic 175 x 275 mm SOLD Deep blue ocean fading
Deep blue ocean fading 2021 The House Keeper, Broom (Cytisus scoparius)
The House Keeper, Broom (Cytisus scoparius) 2017 Forest fold
Forest fold 2021 The Woodswoman, Gorse, (Ulex europaeus)
The Woodswoman, Gorse, (Ulex europaeus) 2017 The Land Girl, Macrocarpa (Cupressus macrocarpa)
The Land Girl, Macrocarpa (Cupressus macrocarpa) 2017 |