Jacquelyn Greenbank is an artist based in Christchurch. Greenbank's crocheted objects reference everyday objects, bringing to mind memories of op-shopping, market stalls and New Zealand living rooms. Although discovering value in found or discarded things is not uncommon, Greenbank's observations through her chosen medium have offered refreshing interpretations of our post-colonial situation, social history and popular customs. Take Greenbank's The Royal Raleigh Watchers for instance. Featured in Artspace's 2005 new artist's show, Compelled, Greenbank's crocheted Raleigh bicycle posed the question, "Does the British monarchy elicit even a hairsbreadth of affection in the hearts and minds of the people in Aotearoa? How tainted and twisted is colonialism's stain?" Utilizing her chosen folksy craft media for its lyrical and conceptual possibilities, Brain is the first work in a new series which draws upon educational children's books. With an imaginative, fun and slightly macabre twist on this genre, Brain is exactly what the title implies; a brain standing in its own pool of congealed, i.e. carefully crocheted, blood.
Loren Clements is an Auckland based artist. Clements's sound objects operate in a quasi-scientific realm. Constructed of various toys, computer joysticks and electronic flotsam and jetsam, Clements's Degenerate and Enable (I-III) series produces a distinctive wall of sound art described by the artist as "a corrupted floodgate ... capable of releasing sonic mayhem." The home-made "Popular Electronics" appearance of Clements's objects belies the time and aesthetic consideration which has gone into their creation. It is one thing to take in the appearance of these works and another to listen to the sound they produce. The viewer is at once disturbed and calmed by the harmonics and toy sounds haphazardly emerging from the din of electronic bleeps and distorted frequencies.
Erica Van Zon is an Auckland artist whose work plays with "threads of shifting memory through pastiche of objects personified via a handmade, signature aesthetic." Obsessively sifting among indicators and traces of European lineage both private and public, Van Zon ingeniously hand makes objects which presuppose a state of liminality, half way between reality and fiction. Van Zon's works for Homeliness - for instance Black Cat - are inspired by film sets, books and family references. Re-creating cinematic props and propositions to be experienced first hand by the viewer, it is a crafty conceptual gesture which brings to mind a passage by French curator Nicholas Bourillard, "the exhibition may have turned into a set, but who comes to act in it? How do the actors and extras make their way across it, and in the midst of what kind of scenery? One day, somebody ought to write the history of art using the peoples who pass through it."
Andy Kingston is an artist working in ceramics and is based in Kaeo, Northland. Kingston employs a wide vocabulary in his ceramic works, drawing freely upon local vernacular, literary and art historical sources with a humorous and irreverent touch. Kingston's earthenware plates, embellished with various images and commentaries, are often exhibited in small groupings or installations. The textual and image based fragments resulting from these combinations are entertaining and illuminating. In Kingston's installation of four set pieces for Homeliness, (each made up of multiple works) the artist appears to be introducing his own version of New Zealand art history, while the material presence of clay simultaneously suggests a feeling of folk-documented narrative.
While not implicitly an ode to the 70s and 80s, the artists and works in Homeliness nevertheless reference craft traditions and related media from a similar social-historical and generational perspective, albeit within the auspices of contemporary art practice. Sampling various "crafty" and hobbyist influences and delving, no doubt, into aspects of our collective psyche, the artists in Homeliness share an interesting approach to contemporary art which could be characterized as "object-centric."
Matt Blomeley - 8 October 2007
1. Starving Artists Fund. 5 October 2007. http://www.starvingartistsfund.com
2. Artspace. 8 October 2007. http://www.artspace.org.nz/exhibitions/2005/compelled.asp
3. Bourillard, Nicholas. Relational Aesthetics. Les Presses du Reel. France. 2002. pp74,75.