Dunedin Arts and Cultural Events
Dunedin Arts and Cultural Events
April 2005 to May 2005
Following is a schedule of confirmed events in the City of Dunedin. The Dunedin City Council (DCC) City Marketing distributes the information on behalf of the attractions that appear below. Please contact event organisers directly for further information and confirmation of dates and times.
April 2005
University of Otago - Lunchtime Theatre: Bite size Shows
Lunchtime Theatre is celebrating its thirty years innovation of Theatre Studies at the University of Otago and has been pleasing audiences ever since its conception. There are a huge variety of performance styles - from improvised theatre to naturalistic plays, to simply the most bizarre material encountered.
A Talk in the Park by Alan Ayckbourn
Different. Diverse. Dissimilar. Conflicting. Opposite. Unalike. The Same? Five people. Think too much. Different lives, Different times. Who was the last person you saw that you didn't know? What did you think? A walk in the park for you. A talk in the park for them. The same...
Runs Until 1 April 2005, 1.00pm
This Product Contains no CFC or HCFC by Scott Ransom
Audience members, you will be touched! Dance, monkey! Dance!
7 & 8 April 2005, 1.00pm
The Myth of Stephen Dedalus by Stayci Childs
This play about Art and the Meaning of Life is based on the writings of James Joyce.
14 & 15 April 2005, 1.00pm
Eddie and the Afterlife by Lucy Schmidt
“Angels in America?” Not quite, but angels step in to put the dark times right. Et in arcadia ergo party.
21 & 22 April 2005, 1.00 pm
Einstein’s Tongue by Jerry Jaffe
You can’t put a bigger box into a smaller box, and the poetry in the night around us.
28 & 29 April 2005, 1.00pm
Allen Hall Theatre, University of Otago, Union Street, Dunedin
Contact for enquiries: Fiona McLaughlin, phone (03) 479 8896
Dunedin Public Library Network
Saucy Readings
The Fortune Theatre's lusty cast of the NZ Premiere of “Things We Do For Love” by Alan Ayckbourn, will present an exciting live performance, at the Dunedin City Library. Experience a 20-minute excerpt, with an accompanying afternoon tea, and catch the rest of the play only at the Fortune Theatre until 7 May.
5 April 2005, 2.30pm
Dunedin City Library, Moray Place, Dunedin
7 Poets
7 Poets at 7.00 pm on 7 April at Port Chalmers Public Library. This is a special opportunity to come and hear 7 Dunedin poets read their work. Poets performing include Rob Allan, Diane Brown, Kay McKenzie Cooke, David Eggleton, David Howard, Martha Morseth and Peter Olds.
7 April 2005, 7.00pm
Port Chalmers Library, Beach Street, Port Chalmers
Discovery Tours
Take a free tour of the City Library every Tuesday and every last Saturday of the month.
5, 12, 19, 26 April 2005, 10.30am and 1.00pm. 30 April 2005, 2.00pm.
Dunedin City Library, Moray Place, Dunedin
Turn Off TV Week
A fortnight of wonderful community events staged at Blueskin Bay.
23 April - 8 May 2005
Blueskin Bay Library, Blueskin Bay.
Contact for enquiries: Fiona Sherriff, phone (03) 474 5080
Stack Trek Tours
Go where few borrowers have gone before. Visit the City Library’s basement area and find those long lost “oldies but goodies” every last Saturday of the month.
30 April 2005, 1.00pm
Dunedin City Library, Moray Place, Dunedin
Contact for enquiries: Liz Knowles, phone (03) 474 3317
Globe Theatre
Daughters of Heaven by Michaelanne Forster
Daughters of Heaven is a play directed by Corey Anderson. Daughters of Heaven traces the same events as Heavenly Creatures, Peter Jackson’s version of the tragedy that rocked Christchurch in the 1950s when 2 young women killed the mother of one of them. We know what happened. Michaelanne Forster’s play, written before Jackson’s film was made and while she lived in Dunedin, explores the possible reasons why it happened.
7 - 16 April 2005 (excluding Monday 11 April)
Globe Theatre, 104 London Street, Dunedin
Contact for bookings: Globe Theatre Box Office, phone (03) 4773274
Contact for enquiries: Rosemary Beresford, phone (03) 4797273 (day), (03) 4780248 (evening)
Hocken Library
Cantata: a play
of the trace II - A multi-media installation by Lyn Plummer
Using choral sound tracks and richly surfaced objects
which are incised, slit, painted, stitched and adorned with
glass beads, threads, hair and nails, Plummer's installation
changes the secular space of the gallery into a theatre of
ritual. Head of Painting at the School of Art, Otago
Polytechnic for the past seven years, Lyn Plummer has
previously lived in the far north and outback areas of
Australia and in Papua New Guinea, which has encouraged an
interest in ceremonial costume. Since 1990 she has treated
surface in her painting as if it was human skin, showing how
it bears the traces of cultural and personal memory of
sexuality, sacrifice and power .
Runs Until 11 April 2005
Das Endeavour: sculpture by Evan Jones with Art from Captain Cooks Voyages curated by Anne Harlow
An installation of figurative sculpture and artefacts in which Evan Jones (completing his Master of Fine Arts) engages ideas associated with the museum, colonial heroism and the collection of heritage. Insignificant details in history are distorted and re-presented by Jones as fact, with particular reference drawn to James Cook, Bernini and Wedgwood. Painstakingly crafted and Neo-classical in style - yet made from the hobbyist material “Das” (an air-hardening polymer clay) - Jones’ work in humorous and intimate. These works are combined with prints, paintings and books from the Hocken Collections related to Captain Cooks voyaging in the Pacific.
22 April - 18 June 2005
Hocken Library, cnr Anzac Avenue & Parry Street, Dunedin
Contact for enquiries: Pennie Hunt, phone (03) 479 5648
Dunedin Centre
A Chamber Music New Zealand Concert
The first concert of the Chamber Music New Zealand 2005 Celebrity Season features The New Zealand String Quartet in concert performing Haydn’s ‘String Quartet Opus 76 No 5’ in D, Crumb’s ‘Black Angels’ and Beethoven’s ‘String Quartet Opus 132’ in A minor.
2 April 2005, 8.00pm
Glenroy Auditorium, 1 Harrop Street, Dunedin
Contact for Enquiries: Dunedin Concerts Manager, Dorothy Duthie, phone (03) 481 1382
Contact for bookings: Regent Theatre Ticketek, phone (03) 477 8597
Southern Sinfonia - An Afternoon in England
The Southern Sinfonia’s opening 2005 concert features works by three of England’s most outstanding composers. A highlight will be the performance of Vaughan Williams’s Oboe Concerto with soloist Robert Orr (Principal Oboe with the NZSO). Also in the programme will be works by Frank Bridge and Elgar, providing a delightful kaleidoscope of English Experiences. Southern Sinfonia’s Principal Guest Conductor Nicholas Braithwaite will also wield the baton for Beethoven’s dramatic Symphony No. 2, which concludes the programme.
10 April 2005, 3.00pm
Glenroy Auditorium, 1 Harrop Street, Dunedin
Contact for bookings: Regent Theatre Ticketek, phone (03) 477 8597
Contact for enquiries: Katie Ellwood, phone (03) 477
5623; email southernsinfonia@xtra.co.nz
The Topp Twins
The living, singing, dancing, fit-inducing, cultural
caricatures of New Zealand are back, fresh from sell-out
shows around Australia and with a new CD to boot. Popular
kiwi icons Camp Mother and Camp Leader and the Kens, are
joined by new characters, Hertie & Gertie, yodelling pig
farmers from Switzerland. This comic, spontaneous, boundless
pair brings you a riotous comedy show, more fun than a
possum up your trousers. 23 April 2005, 8.00pm Glenroy
Auditorium, 1 Harrop Street, Dunedin Contact for bookings
and enquiries: Regent Theatre Ticketek phone (03) 477 8597
A Chamber Music New Zealand Concert The second concert
of the Chamber Music New Zealand 2005 Celebrity Season
features UK pianist Piers Lane performing music by
Beethoven, Schumann, Schubert and Liszt. The evening’s
programme includes Beethoven’s Piano Sonata Opus 27 No 2
‘Moonlight’, ‘Allegretto’ from Symphony No 7; Schumann’s
Exercises on a Theme of Beethoven and ‘Fantasie’ in C Opus
17; Schubert’s ‘Impromptu’ in G flat; and Beethoven/Liszt a
song from ‘ An die ferne Geliebte’. 27 April 2005, 8 pm
Glenroy Auditorium, 1 Harrop Street, Dunedin Contact
for Enquiries: Dunedin Concerts Manager, Dorothy Duthie,
pphone (03) 481 1382 Contact for bookings: Regent
Theatre, Dunedin, phone (03) 477 8597 Hilux Highway of
Legends Pacific Entertainment is proud to announce the
biggest tour of New Zealand country music superstars ever
assembled. Iconic Kiwi entertainers Jodi Vaughan, Gray
Bartlett, Brendan Dugan, Patsy Riggir, the Hamilton Country
Bluegrass Band together with compere Martin Crump will
travel the length of the country in March and April this
year with the reunion tour fans have been wanting for years.
The million dollar-selling artists will combine to perform
their entire chart topping songs known and loved by many.
15 April 2005, 8.00pm Dunedin Town Hall, Moray Place,
Dunedin Contact for booking and enquiries: Regent Theatre
Ticketek, phone (03) 477 8597 Boost Mobile Hook-Up Tour
2 NZ Hip Hop Heavyweights join forces for The Boost
Mobile Hook Up Tour 2. Now in its second year, Dawn Raid
and Boost Mobile join forces once again to bring you the
biggest names in Aotearoa's hip hop scene touring 15 towns
and cities around the country. The results are in and since
the last Hook Up Tour in March 2004, the local hip hop scene
has had 5 debut #1 singles and has created some of the
biggest new names in the NZ music scene. Leading the way
with Hip Hop Heavyweights Savage, King Kapisi and
Deceptikonz, this year's tour boasts an impressive lineup
including Fast Crew, DJ Sir Vere, Mareko, Dei Hamo, Misfits
of Science and Adeaze (with full live band). This year the
tour also combines the key elements from the 4 corners of
hip hop with The Disruptive Crew, Askew and the Disruptiv
All Stars taking their unique style of street art and
breaking around the country. The tour kicks off in
Christchurch on 15th April, then heads to Invercargill and
back up to Auckland stopping off at 15 towns along the way.
This year's tour has been refined and the shows will include
a huge sound system, amazing audio visual stage props, skate
board ramps, graffiti art, break dancers and local emerging
talent. As Brotha D says "The best just got better!!". So
don't miss it - the Boost Mobile Hook Up Tour 2 will be
turning the music realm upside down as it sets another new
precedent in Hip Hop. 16 April 2005, 8.00pm Dunedin
Town Hall, Moray Place, Dunedin Contact for booking and
enquiries: Regent Theatre Ticketek, phone (03) 477 8597
RSA Choir Anzac Day Revue The RSA Choir is a familiar
sound in the Dunedin Town Hall having performed at its
opening ceremony in 1930 and regularly since. It is fitting
therefore that the Choir’s most important annual concert be
included in the Dunedin Town Hall’s 75th celebration
programme. This outstanding male choir captures many moods
during its Anzac Day concert and the audience will
experience many emotions, during this nostalgic musical
variety concert. In 1972 Vera Lynn performed with the RSA
Choir at the Dunedin Town Hall so it’s a sure bet that Vera
Lynn fans will be in for a treat tonight. 25 April 2005,
7.30pm Dunedin Town Hall, Moray Place, Dunedin Contact
for enquiries: David More, phone (03) 476 2521 Contact
for bookings: Regent Theatre Ticketek, Dunedin, phone (03)
477 8597 Cleveland Living Arts Centre Easter Show
Artists have been invited to respond to the theme of
Easter. This group exhibition is sure to delight and
disgust. Pagan and religious - any interpretation goes.
Runs Until 2 April 2005 The Mind in the Cave Adam
Douglass, Mike Devereux and Glen Clark are all young Otago
Fine Arts graduates who have been exploring, through
painterly process, particular relationships they feel with
the landscape. 5 - 17 April 2005 Masami Yamazaki
Known in Japan for her large-scale soft sculptures and
outdoor installations. Masami exhibits for the first time in
New Zealand with a selection of paintings and sculptures.
18 - 29 April 2005 Arthouse - the 1995 Print Portfolio
Established in June 1993, the Arthouse was an important
chapter in Dunedin’s Art history. An artist run co-operative
studio, gallery and art education space; it contributed to
many an early career. As a fundraising project a limited
edition of 30 print portfolios were made, only 17 of which
had been made available for purchase by the public. The
contributing artists were: Barry Cleavin, Inge Doesburg,
Irene Ferguson, Roger Hall, Ralph Hotere, Clive Humphries,
Kathryn Madill, Els Nordhoof, Jo Ogier, Jenna Packer, Eion
Stevens, Marilyn Webb and Dan Weldon. A full set of these
prints will be on show for the first time since 1995. 19
April - 14 May 2005 Cleveland Living Arts Centre, First
Floor, Dunedin Railway Station, Dunedin. Monday - Friday,
10.00am - 4.00pm; Saturday, 10.00am - 2.00pm Contact for
enquiries: Kari Morseth, phone (03) 477 7291 Dunedin
Regent Theatre World Cinema Showcase The New Zealand
Film Festival Trust, organisers of the International Film
Festival, are pleased to collaborate for the seventh year
with the Regent Theatre to bring you a fine selection of new
and classic films from all around the world. This lively
programme of terrific films, old and new, includes premiere
screenings of the most anticipated films of the year
including Pedro Almodovar’s complex noir melodrama Bad
Education as the opening night film, and 2005 Oscar
Nominated real life drama Hotel Rwanda . The selection
heralds the return to the big screen of some all-time
classics such as Buster Keaton’s comic masterpiece The
General and the film that helped launch Federico Fellini to
international stardom, La Strada. There will be plenty of
NZ premieres, including some extraordinary documentaries, a
gripping French thriller and Tony Gatlif’s (Latcho Drom,
Gadjo Dilo) visually and musically exhilarating Exiles . As
always, the World Cinema Showcase also features welcome
reprises of some of the gems from last year’s International
Film Festival that should not be missed on the big screen.
Fans of animation or those that just love a great story can
enjoy four films from the Ghibli Studio - the creative home
of movies such as Spirited Away and Kiki’s Delivery Service.
Music lovers will be treated to screenings of three of the
documentaries from Martin Scorcese’s acclaimed The Blues
series. Festival booklets are available from the Regent
Theatre. 4 - 21 April 2005 Contact for enquiries:
Robyn Harper, phone (04) 802 2575 or email robyn@nzff.co.nz
Contact for bookings: Regent
Theatre Ticketek , phone (03) 477 8597 Muldoon by David
McPhail Calling a snap election doesn’t give you a lot of
time to prepare, Mr Muldoon?”… “Doesn’t give my opponents
much time either.” “From the moment he strides on stage
this is Muldoon… As a piece of theatre, McPhail’s Muldoon is
an admirable achievement.” Sunday Star Times. Sir Robert
David Muldoon was Prime Minister from 1975 - 1984. He
survived carless days, the Springbok Tour, the Falklands War
and two coups led from within his own party. In 1984 Sir
Robert David Muldoon lost the two things of which he was
most proud - the leadership of the country and his own
political career. McPhail’s play focuses on that fateful
evening in July 1984, the day of the snap election called by
Muldoon one month previously. Packed with political
intrigue this funny and moving drama explores Muldoon’s
drive for success and obsession with power. “I made a
lifetime of enemies,” said Muldoon. 29 April 2005, 8.00pm
The Wizard Of Oz Show The Yellow Brick Road leads to
New Zealand this April. Children are invited to join Shakey
the Scarecrow, Shiney the Tinman, Scarey the Lion and their
friends from Oz in their adventures down the Yellow Brick
Road as The Wizard of Oz Show travels around New Zealand
during the April school holidays. Through more than 480
performances around Australia, a full scale musical,
fundraisers, hospital visits and an Annual Wizard of Oz
Festival, the cast have thrilled easily over 500,000 people.
Children are invited to come to the show dressed as a fairy,
munchkin, or any of their favourite Oz characters and have a
fun time. Shakey the Scarecrow and some of his friends will
be available for a short while after shows for photographs
and autographs! For more details of the show, visit
www.thewizardofozshow.com 30 April 2005, 10.00am
Regent Theatre, 17 The Octagon, Dunedin Contact for
bookings and enquiries: Regent Theatre Ticketek, phone (03)
477 8597 Peter Rae Gallery - Mainly Paper Exhibition
of works from artists including Claire Beynon, Don Binney,
Kees Bruin, Inge Doesburg, Simon Kaan, John Mitchell, and
Bryan Poole. Runs Until 5 April 2005 Peter Rae
Gallery, 31 Moray Place, Dunedin Contact for enquiries:
Peter Rae, phone (03) 470 1022 or 027 458 5424,
peterraegallery@xtra.co.nz
Milford Galleries J S
Parker: Four Big Paintings John Parker is turning sixty
and is celebrating with four large works at Milford
Galleries Dunedin. A Continuation of the Plain Song Series,
which he began in the late 1980s, these paintings of the
Canterbury and Marlborough plains use colour and intense
layered brushwork (a misnomer in that the paint is applied
thickly with a palette knife). The title, Plain Song,
alludes to the medieval Gregorian chant, the shapes of the
'plains' - the land, which provides the inspiration - and
puns on the two-dimensional 'planes' of the Cubists. It also
conveys plainness as opposed to embroidery or exaggeration.
Parker has always been drawn to emotive rather than
hard-edged art and believes in eliminating in painting any
obstacles to the spirit: "If your paintings are going to
have a language, it has got to be felt. It's a physical
thing," he says. Exhibiting regularly since 1967, Parker's
work is held in many public and private collections
nationally and internationally. He was Frances Hodgkins
Fellow at the University of Otago in 1975 and since then has
lived and worked in Marlborough. Runs Until 9 April 2005
Joanna Braithwaite: Selected Works Milford Galleries
Dunedin is celebrating Joanna Braithwaite at the Dunedin
Public Art Gallery with an exhibition of her recent
paintings. Braithwaite neither intends to shock and
confront with her work. Two headed swans, frog rains and a
dachshund using a wheelchair fascinate, compel and involve
the viewer raising questions of human interaction with the
world of animals. The richly painted canvases, fluid
brushwork and simplified images and colours reveal both
elegance and unexpected beauty, inviting contemplation.
Says Braithwaite: “The relationship that exists between
people and animals is often one of dependence, sometimes one
of fear. I have consistently pursued an interest in painting
about these sometimes unusual relationships. In paintings
such as Twist of Fate one species becomes another - such
works are about life and death - time passing. The fragility
attached to a life that ends and the optimism that a new
life brings.” Joanna Braithwaite was born in Halifax,
England in 1962 and came to New Zealand in 1965. She
graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University
of Canterbury in 1985 and was awarded the Ethel Rose Overton
Scholarship in 1983, and the Olivia Spencer Bower Foundation
Art Award in 1990. She was awarded merit prizes in the 1997
and 1998 Visa Gold Art Awards. Since 1999 she has lived and
worked in Sydney and has held many solo exhibitions in New
Zealand and Australia. She has work in many private and
public collections in New Zealand, Australia and London
including the Robert McDougall Art Gallery, Brisbane Public
Art Gallery and the Dunmoochin Foundation in Melbourne.
Runs Until 9 April 2005 Glass Invitational NZ The
Glass Invitational NZ curated by Stephen Higginson is the
premier glass exhibition in New Zealand surveying major
achievement and innovation of the preceding two years. NZ
art glass is internationally renowned, distinctive and
imbued with character. One of the significant strengths is
revealed by its variety: the geometric abstract concerns of
Borrella, the layered gestural forms of Amsel, the colours
of Robinson, the pan-Pacific language of Siddell's necklaces
contrast sharply with the domestic narrative of Fairclough
and McClure's sophisticated remodelling of everyday objects.
Featured artists in this exhibition include, Claudia
Borrella, Galia Amsel, Ann Robinson, Emily Siddell, Wendy
Fairclough and Elizabeth McClure with other work by Garry
Nash, Jim Dennison and Leanne Williams. The Glass
Invitational NZ exhibition in Dunedin is part of a national
tour 16 April - 31 May 2005 Milford Galleries Dunedin,
18 Dowling Street, Dunedin Contact for enquiries: Karen
Trebilcock, phone (03) 477 8275 Fortune Theatre - Things
we do for Love by Alan Ayckbourn Lust brings out the
worst in people. Gilbert, living downstairs, is so
tragically devoted to his landlady, Barbara, that he
pretends to take her old clothes to the charity shop and
then secretly wears them himself, while painting her naked
likeness on his ceiling. Barbara, beautiful and brittle, is
a high-powered executive who cares little for romance and
its sticky consequences. Squeakily perky Nikki and her
fiancé, hunky Hamish the oceanographer, have just moved in
upstairs, making the bed springs sing. It is hatred at first
sight as Barbara and Hamish spit and snarl at each other -
but is the crusty, curmudgeonly spinster melting into the
fray? Sir Alan Ayckbourn, the first playwright to be
knighted since Noel Coward, is also one of the world’s most
successful. This new comedy is a study of the effects of
love; whether we can live without it, and more importantly,
once we have it, the things we’ll do to keep it. 15 April
- 7 May 2005 Fortune Theatre, 231 Stuart Street, Dunedin
Contact for enquiries: Lisa Scott, phone (03) 477 1695
Contact for Bookings: Box Office, phone (03) 477 8323
Blue Oyster Gala Opening …all new Blue Oyster Blue
Oyster took the opportunity when moving premises to
completely redesign the gallery space to better-fit diverse
exhibitions needs and add to their existing programmes. The
Gallery continues with the two exhibition spaces developed
2004 and some new initiatives. The gala opening on 19 April
will see the launch of two exciting new programmes. The
first is a purpose built gallery, which they have
provisionally named the ‘Dark Side’. It will be equipped
with new technology especially for ‘new media’ work (video
and sound work) and will run on a three-week exhibition
cycle the same as the existing spaces. The second addition
is a permanent video lounge called ‘Blue Movies’ that will
have an open programme on a monitor, the idea is that we
will show whatever is brought in (possibly only once!) on
the condition we can have a copy…with a view to building up
a library. The first exhibition to launch the ‘Dark Side’ is
a digital installation by Chris Baldwin opening 19 April and
running until 7 May 2005. 19 April 2005 Emily Harris
Harris is exploring what she calls an ‘adolescent
aesthetic.’ The work looks at the heightened resonance of
the music, imagery and ideas when they are encountered
during formative experiences. The work is torn between the
contradictory impulses of embarrassed rejection of
sentimental cliché and Kitsch while refusing to abandon the
transformative possibilties of genuine emotional response
wherever it is found. Appropriating ‘popular culture’
material from television, radio and the Internet, she then
filters the images through several stages; first composing
images on the computer, painting copies of these, then
digitally photographing the paintings and printing them in a
large glossy format. These works defined as paintings that
reflect an aesthetic of the digital, ideas of authenticity
and quality are both challenged in the process of copy and
translation. 19 April - 7 May 2005 Blue Oyster East
side Monica Peters - morph Observations in the Field
Observations in the Field exhibition is more about the
process of creating work than it is about presenting
conclusions. Drawing provides the means- fundamental stuff,
direct, not being seduced by 21st century technology.
Graphite directly on to walls, chalk straight on to
blackboards; the works are large, ephemeral and immediate.
The descriptive quality of these lines is used to depict a
slice of the surrounding diversity, a cross section of the
seemingly endless structural permutations of the natural
world. Diagrams, the crisp didactic sort usually found in
botany books, provide the initial cue. From here, the
drawings are added to and subtracted from over the
three-week duration of the exhibition. The residues of
previous drawings are left on surfaces as scaffolding for
subsequent drawings. As a series of ongoing a constantly
evolving works, the decision-making process of
what-should-come-next takes place within the gallery. The
gallery becomes a place of action with the works-in-progress
functioning as a part performance; where being present and
active in the exhibition space, bridges the gap between
artist and public. 19 April - 7 May 2005 Blue Oyster
West side Blue Oyster Gallery, Basement, Moray Chambers,
30 Moray Place, Dunedin Contact for enquiries: Ali
Bramwell, phone (03) 479 0197 Dunedin Public Art Gallery
Gretchen Albrecht: Returning This exhibition
showcases a selection of evocative, richly coloured and
often spectacular paintings by one of New Zealand’s leading
abstractionists. This exhibition focuses on her signature
hemisphere and oval works, and ranges from pieces made
during Albrecht’s Frances Hodgkins residency in Dunedin in
1981 through to recent works. A Dunedin Public Art
Gallery exhibition Runs Until 8 May 2005 John Kinder’s
New Zealand Few people realise that the Reverend Dr John
Kinder was the only 19th century New Zealand artist to work
with both painting and photography as visual mediums. Such a
combined visual talent was not only exceptional in New
Zealand - it has very few 19th century international
parallels. John Kinder’s New Zealand is the fist exhibition
to survey Kinder’s twin achievements as an artist of paint
as well as the camera. An Auckland Art Gallery Toi o
Tamaki touring exhibition. Runs Until 8 May 2005
Hotbed: Loans, Purchases and Gifts The word
‘collection’ suggests static objects stored in
temperature-controlled rooms. This late-summer show,
however, reveals the Gallery’s contemporary collection as a
place of heat, bizarre beauty and unstable energy - a hotbed
of growth and change. Featuring the work of Jae Hoon Lee,
Bill Hammond, Seraphine Pick, 2005 Frances Hodgkins fellow
Rohan Wealleans and others, Hotbed showcases art in which
nature gets pushed to unnatural extremes, paint bulges and
peels, and familiar objects grow minds of their own. Runs
Until 12 May 2005 Joanna Braithwaite: Wonderland The
world of Joanna Braithwaite's Wonderland is part menagerie,
part bestiary, and part human zoo. Her richly brushed
canvases are places where the laws of nature are calmly
bent, and wonderful hybrids emerge. Snakes grow into swans,
frogs rain from the sky, and humans are lofted skyward by
birds and butterflies. Braithwaite paints her strange
creatures with such assurance that they seem perfectly
natural. In the process, she reminds us how strange 'the
natural' really is. Organised in collaboration with
Christchurch Art Gallery Runs Until 15 May 2005 Big
Wall: Pip Culbert Pip Culbert takes everything but the
seams away from familiar fabric objects, and what is left
provides a lot to look at and think about. In this new work,
Culbert has cut apart and opened up thirty-six domestic
aprons. Floating on the Big Wall, they form a strange new
graphic alphabet - an array of signs and gestures that the
original aprons never dreamed they contained. Runs Until
29 May 2005 Art to Express New Zealand Curated by Anne
Harlow, this exhibition explores perceptions of the New
Zealand landscape through a selection of paintings, works on
paper, photographs and installations from the permanent
collection of the Dunedin Public Art Gallery. A Dunedin
Public Art Gallery exhibition Runs Until 28 August 2005
Sites for the Eyes: European Landscapes from the Dunedin
Public Art Gallery Collection Sites for the Eyes is an
exhibition curated by Peter Stupples, formerly Associate
Professor of Art History, University of Otago. The
exhibition features works from the Dunedin Public Art
Gallery collection that trace the history of the European
landscape tradition. A Dunedin Public Art Gallery
exhibition Runs Until 28 August 2005 For the Love of
Christ The Christian faith and Christian themes are
expressed in many ways in this exhibition drawn from the
Dunedin Public Art Gallery collection. A Dunedin Public
Art Gallery exhibition Runs Until 28 August 2005
Frances Hodgkins: Daughter of Dunedin Daughter of
Dunedin is the second exhibition in the gallery permanently
devoted to the works of one of New Zealand’s most highly
regarded artists, Frances Hodgkins. The exhibition offers
the viewer an insight into the artist’s early life and work.
A Dunedin Public Art Gallery exhibition Ongoing
exhibition Sara Hughes: Love Me Tender Sara Hughes
brings colour and life to the Dunedin Public Art Gallery’s
Otago Daily Times Gallery with her distinctive variations on
the Paisley patterns that Scottish settlers brought to
Dunedin. Cut from pre-painted sheets of sticky vinyl,
Hughes’ Paisley shapes stretch and flex as if manipulated on
a computer screen - nineteenth century forms refreshed by
twenty-first century technology. A Dunedin Public Art
Gallery exhibition Ongoing exhibition Dunedin Public
Art Gallery, 30 The Octagon, PO Box 5045, Dunedin Contact
for enquires: Tim Pollock, phone (03) 474 3243 Otago
Settlers Museum Arcadian Dreams The imaginings of R A
Lawson and George O’Brien in 19th Century Dunedin Working
as a draughtsman for Scottish architect Robert Lawson meant
that elegant Gothic Revival buildings became prominent in
the colonial watercolours of Otago painted by the Irishman
George O’Brien. The Otago Settlers Museum and Hocken
Library collections are richly endowed with many examples of
O’Brien’s idealised landscapes of the region, including
bird’s eyes view of the Otago Peninsula. These are brought
together with period photographs to enable visitors to
compare the ideal and the real. Runs Until 29 May 2005
Family Silver Collections and Connections Silver is a
magnet for memories. Passed down through families,
organisations and institutions, silver carries its history
in its many decorative forms, but also through marks,
inscriptions and stories. Some objects in this exhibition
tell the stories of influential people in the community,
including founders of the Otago settlement such as William
Cargill and the whaler Johnnie Jones. Others represent the
merest traces of people’s lives in an initial on the handle
of a spoon or a photograph in a locket. The pieces in Family
Silver range from sentimental trinkets to examples of
full-blown Victorian splendour; all have been selected from
the Otago Settlers Museum collection. Runs Until 29 May
2005 Across the Ocean Waves What was it like crossing
the oceans to come here in a sailing ship? The core of this
new display is an accurate recreation of the steerage
quarters of an immigrant ship bound for Otago in the days of
sail. Visitors are welcome to climb into a bunk or sit at
the central table and imagine what life would have been like
cooped up for 100 or more days at sea. Short video
presentations bring the era to life. Death and disaster,
fun and romance, the misery of seasickness and the
excitement of arrival are all showcased. A baby dies,
fighting breaks out among the single girls, and there is
dancing and a stolen kisses. This is an interactive
exhibit, which will seize the imagination and transport you
back to the epic voyages made by Otago’s nineteenth century
ancestors. Participants can climb aboard and see for
themselves what the great migration was all about.
Ongoing Exhibition On the Move: Road Transport in
Otago One hundred years ago Thomas Sullivan invented the
tea bag, Charles Menches invented the ice cream cone and
vehicles were becoming increasingly familiar sights on
Dunedin streets. To find out more about local motoring and
transportation milestones check out On the Move: Road
Transport in Otago - an exhibition of vehicles, photographs
and memorabilia recalling not only the dawn of motoring in
Otago but also the heydays of horse-drawn coaches and drays,
tramcars and cycles. Be sure not to miss a ride on the
penny-farthing. Ongoing Exhibition The Smith Gallery
The Otago Early Settlers Museum opened in 1908 with just
one room for displays. Now known as the Smith Gallery, it
was a memorial to Otago’s Scottish pioneers. Stern
Presbyterian faces glowered down from rows of photographic
portraits amidst artefacts of daily life from Otago’s early
days. Today, the Smith Gallery emphasises the importance of
the Early Settlers in the story of Otago. The portraits on
the walls have been rearranged in order of arrival; and a
variety of furniture and other artefacts, all drawn from the
pre-gold rush era, add character to this historic gallery.
Ongoing Exhibition Otago Settlers Museum, 31 Queens
Gardens, Dunedin Contact for enquiries: Tim Pollock,
phone (03) 474 3242 Otago Museum Photo Lightscapes
This travelling exhibition has already shown in
Switzerland and Vietnam and is brought to New Zealand with
the assistance of Pro Helvetia: Arts Council of Switzerland.
Photo Lightscapes consists of 80 photographs, representing
10 photographers from four different countries: Australia,
New Zealand, Vietnam and Switzerland. The photographs in
this exhibition encompass the theme of Light and Colour,
displaying an intriguing blend of artificial lighting and
natural landscapes that result in what can be best described
as “photo-canvases”. This exhibition promises to be a
mesmerising experience. Runs Until 26 June 2005
Special Exhibitions Gallery Snail Mail - Wish You Were
Here Snail Mail - Wish You Were Here is a unique
exhibition of fantastic postcards and is a co-operative
venture with MacAndrew Intermediate School and the Arts
Quest Trust. An estimated 500 postcards will be on display
by local, national and international artists, as well as by
students from the school. Snail Mail - Wish You Were Here
reveals the history of postcards and also includes items
from the Otago Museum collections. The postcards will be on
sale at the Museum Shop. Proceeds raised will be given to
MacAndrew Intermediate School to help find art education.
The Museum will also offer creative workshops and community
programmes to accompany this unique exhibition. Runs
Until 10 July 2005 People of the World Gallery Guided
Tours Take a ‘Highlights of the Museum’ guided tour and
learn some inside knowledge about various aspects that the
Museum has on offer and/or take a guided tour of ‘Southern
Land, Southern People’ and gain a greater understanding, of
the Southern region. ‘Highlights of the Museum’ guided
tours are available at 11.30am and ‘Southern Land, Southern
People’ guided tours are available at 3.30pm (and other
times by prior arrangement). Ongoing Service - 11.30am
and 3.30pm daily Lunchtime Music A range of musicians
will liven up the atrium with live performances each week.
This is now a regular fixture but is subject to change
according to function demands. Museum Foyer, Fridays and
Saturdays between 12 noon and 1.30pm Discovery World
Science Shows These excellent shows are now run by the
Museum’s Science Communicators. Discovery World,
Saturdays & Sundays at 11.00am, 1.00pm and 3.00pm Gallery
Talks Each day, the Otago Museum Communicators present
fascinating 15-minute gallery talks on objects or themes of
particular interest from the Museum's galleries. Ongoing
Service, 2.00pm Daily Search Centre Otago Museum’s
Search Centre research facility provides an inviting
opportunity for visitors to engage in further research on
objects or themes in the galleries of interest to them. It
will also be the first stop for the identification of items
members of the public bring into the Museum, a service that
annually attracts a huge number of objects or specimens.
Well resourced, with swift new computers, microscopes,
modern journals and a great variety of new books, the Search
Centre offers a variety of options for seeking further
information. Set in a comfortable and relaxing environment
the Search Centre is the perfect place in which to think,
read , study, or research. Ongoing Service Search
Centre Weekend Presentations The Museum’s Search Centre
Communicators have developed a series of Search Centre
Weekend Presentations designed to help familiarise people
with the excellent resources provided by this facility.
Ongoing Service, Weekends at 11.30am and 2.30pm
Ongoing Exhibitions The Museum’s timbered Victorian
gallery, the Animal Attic , houses an extensive collection
of natural history specimens from around the world,
re-displayed as they would have been in the late 1800s. A
‘museum within a museum’, this gallery is unique in New
Zealand. Explore the Tangata Whenua Gallery with its
impressive displays of Maori Cultural artefacts, including a
stunning collection of Southern Maori material. The Pacific
Culture Galleries display outstanding collections from
Polynesia and Melanesia. People of the World has world
archaeological treasures including ancient Greek pottery; a
mummy and other fascinating artefacts from Ancient Egypt; a
striking collection of swords; exquisite decorative arts
from Asia and Europe and a superb array of costume and
textiles. Walk the length of the giant Fin Whale in the
Maritime Gallery , and then take in the intricate detail of
a wealth of nautical artefacts. Come face to face with the
extinct giant moa in the Extinction and Survival area and
see one of the few complete moa eggs in the world. Otago
Museum, 419 Great King Street, Dunedin Contact for
enquiries: Annabelle Boelema, phone (03) 474 7474 ext 845,
www.otagomuseum.govt.nz MAY 2005 Cleveland Living Arts Centre Arthouse -
the 1995 Print Portfolio Established in June 1993, the
Arthouse was an important chapter in Dunedin’s Art history.
An artist run co-operative studio, gallery and art education
space; it contributed to many an early career. As a
fundraising project a limited edition of 30 print portfolios
were made, only 17 of which had been made available for
purchase by the public. The contributing artists were: Barry
Cleavin, Inge Doesburg, Irene Ferguson, Roger Hall, Ralph
Hotere, Clive Humphries, Kathryn Madill, Els Nordhoof, Jo
Ogier, Jenna Packer, Eion Stevens, Marilyn Webb and Dan
Weldon. A full set of these prints will be on show for the
first time since 1995. Runs Until 14 May 2005 Jennifer
Leyden Jennifer Leydon presents a series of etchings
inspired by and representing the icon event - the Regent 24
hour book sale. 15 - 28 May 2005 Members Show With
over 90 artists members ranging from students, new artists
of all ages and established artists the Centre for the first
time hosts an exhibition for members to show their latest
work. This is sure to be an eclectic and entrancing mix of
subject and media. 18 May - 6 June 2005 Cleveland
Living Arts Centre, First Floor, Dunedin Railway Station,
Dunedin. Monday - Friday, 10.00am - 4.00pm; Saturday,
10.00am - 2.00pm Contact for enquiries: Kari Morseth,
phone (03) 477 7291 Dunedin Centre Popov Family In
Concert A celebration of Hebraic music and dance by the
internationally acclaimed Popov Family. Serguei, brilliant
concert violinist and Helena, his prima ballerina wife,
along with their 15-year-old daughter Elisa, present
colourful solo and family group folk and classical music and
dance. 2 May 2005, 7.30pm Glenroy Auditorium, 1 Harrop
Street, Dunedin Contact for bookings and enquiries:
Regent Theatre Ticketek, phone (03) 477 8597 The
Carer written by Alan Hopgood and directed by Don Mackay .
The Carer is a play for anyone who has ever been in love.
“...at times during The Carer your heart will crumble, and
at times it will fill with hope and joy. It is a
life-affirming experience,” Sunday Telegraph, Sydney. The
Carer is a unique play filled with laughter, life and love.
After delighting Australian audiences for over four years,
this landmark drama comes to New Zealand. The play tells
the story of George Parker and his love for his recently
lost wife. Take this journey with George and enter into his
world - a world touched with love, family and the perfect
soul mate. With a spirited collection of memories and
recollections, you will meet a family that was touched by
tragedy but bonded by love. The message of this simple story
is universal, and one that will be familiar to all of us.
Ray Henwood, one of New Zealand’s leading actors, plays the
central role. Henwood has also played roles in ‘The Lord of
the Rings’, ‘Heavenly Creatures’ and Roger Hall’s ‘Spreading
Out’ and ‘Glide Time’. 4 - 6 May 2005, 8.00pm - 9.30pm
Glenroy Auditorium, 1 Harrop Street, Dunedin Contact
for enquiries: Jo Mackintosh, email
jo@mcphersonpromotions.com Contact for bookings: Regent
Theatre Ticketek, phone (03) 477 8597 Dunedin Public
Libraries Network NZ Music Month: Venture up to the
first floor space and into an exciting wonderland of NZ film
and music. 2 - 30 May 2005 Dunedin City Library, Moray
Place, Dunedin Discovery Tours Take a free tour of the
City Library every Tuesday and every last Saturday of the
month. 3, 10, 17, 24 & 31 May 2005, 10.30am and 1.00pm.
28 May 2005, 2.00pm. Dunedin City Library, Moray Place,
Dunedin Turn Off TV Week A fortnight of wonderful
community events staged at Blueskin Bay. Runs Until 8
May 2005 Blueskin Bay Library, Blueskin Bay. Contact
for enquiries: Fiona Sherriff, phone (03) 474 5080 New
Zealand Post Book Awards 9
- 17 May 2005 Stack Trek Tours Go where few borrowers have gone
before. Visit the City Library’s basement area and find
those long lost “oldies but goodies” every last Saturday of
the month. 28 May 2005, 1.00 pm Dunedin City Library,
Moray Place, Dunedin Contact for enquiries: Liz Knowles,
phone (03) 474 3317 University of Otago - Lunchtime
Theatre: Bite size Shows Lunchtime Theatre is celebrating
its thirty years innovation of Theatre Studies at the
University of Otago and has been pleasing audiences ever
since its conception. There are a huge variety of
performance styles - from improvised theatre to naturalistic
plays, to simply the most bizarre material encountered.
All About Hyman by Chewie Hyman and Di To Kiwi legend
Chewie Hyman stunned the world with his amazing performance
skills after boldly stepping out of his training ground at
Allen Hall. This beautiful documentary follows Chewie as he
goes back to his turangawaewae, taking an in-depth look into
the man behind the bright lights. 5 & 6 May 2005, 1.00pm
Consuming Vanessa by Kate Morris Marriage isn’t a
lifestyle it’s a disease and one that’s slowly killing
Vanessa and her husband Brian. Consuming Vanessa takes a
sarcastic look at “love”, marriage and the things that
really matter. 12 & 13 May 2005, 1.00pm Puppets by
Paul Stephanus A story about you. 19 & 20 May, 1.00pm
Done Eden by Phoebe Smith and Bronwyn Haines Dun
(verb): To make constant or repeated demands. Eden
(noun): a) A state of innocence and purity. b)
Any delightful place. When there is constant demands made
on your innocence - the delightful place is done… 26 & 27
May 2005, 1.00pm Allen Hall Theatre, University of Otago,
Union Street, Dunedin Contact for enquiries: Fiona
McLaughlin, phone (03) 479 8896 Larnach Castle New
Zealand Garden Trust Seminar - Going for Gold The New
Zealand Garden Trust will be holding an exciting and
informative seminar at the delightful destination of Larnach
Castle. The seminar will enable those interested to add
value to your garden and meet with the expectations of the
visitors. There will be knowledgeable and celebrity
speakers, garden visits and exceptional cuisine. This is a
golden opportunity for the discerning garden owner to meet
with like-minded and enthusiastic garden artistes. 6 - 8
May 2005 Larnach Castle, Pukehiki, Otago Peninsula,
Dunedin Contact for bookings and enquiries: Liz Morrow,
phone (09) 307 2411, fax (09) 307 2471, email
lizmorrow@actrix.co.nz Fortune Theatre Things we
do for Love by Alan Ayckbourn Lust brings out the worst
in people. Gilbert, living downstairs, is so tragically
devoted to his landlady, Barbara, that he pretends to take
her old clothes to the charity shop and then secretly wears
them himself, while painting her naked likeness on his
ceiling. Barbara, beautiful and brittle, is a high-powered
executive who cares little for romance and its sticky
consequences. Squeakily perky Nikki and her fiancé, hunky
Hamish the oceanographer, have just moved in upstairs,
making the bed springs sing. It is hatred at first sight as
Barbara and Hamish spit and snarl at each other - but is the
crusty, curmudgeonly spinster melting into the fray? Sir
Alan Ayckbourn, the first playwright to be knighted since
Noel Coward, is also one of the world’s most successful.
This new comedy is a study of the effects of love; whether
we can live without it, and more importantly, once we have
it, the things we’ll do to keep it. Runs Until 7 May 2005
Lulu: Drop dead, gorgeous by Peter Barnes from Frank
Wedekind - a NZ premiere Bodice-ripping Victorian gothic,
this sex tragedy has it all: lust, decadence and obsession.
Lulu is a beautiful, narcissistic young woman - both a
sexual predator at the height of her powers and a moral
innocent. A femme fatale with fatal guile, Lulu bewitches
those who cannot resist her siren’s call, while the shadow
of evil lurks in the background. This cautionary tale
against sexual repression opens a ‘Pandora’s Box’ of social
taboos. A gloriously savage exercise of comedic callousness,
Lulu is a cross between a silent movie vamp and a grown-up -
Lolita. Corrupted in childhood, she retaliates in maturity
by exploiting and enjoying men, until the dark figure that
watches in the gloom plays his destructive hand. Lashings of
sex without love or commitment - don’t try this at home.
20 May - 11 June 2005 Fortune Theatre, 231 Stuart
Street, Dunedin Contact for enquiries: Lisa Scott, phone
(03) 477 1695 Contact for Bookings: Box Office, phone
(03) 477 8323 Blue Oyster Emily Harris Harris is
exploring what she calls an ‘adolescent aesthetic.’ The work
looks at the heightened resonance of the music, imagery and
ideas when they are encountered during formative
experiences. The work is torn between the contradictory
impulses of embarrassed rejection of sentimental cliché and
Kitsch while refusing to abandon the transformative
possibilties of genuine emotional response wherever it is
found. Appropriating ‘popular culture’ material from
television, radio and the Internet, she then filters the
images through several stages; first composing images on the
computer, painting copies of these, then digitally
photographing the paintings and printing them in a large
glossy format. These works defined as paintings that reflect
an aesthetic of the digital, ideas of authenticity and
quality are both challenged in the process of copy and
translation. Runs Until 7 May 2005 Blue Oyster East
side Monica Peters - morph Observations in the Field
Observations in the Field exhibition is more about the
process of creating work than it is about presenting
conclusions. Drawing provides the means- fundamental stuff,
direct, not being seduced by 21st century technology.
Graphite directly on to walls, chalk straight on to
blackboards; the works are large, ephemeral and immediate.
The descriptive quality of these lines is used to depict a
slice of the surrounding diversity, a cross section of the
seemingly endless structural permutations of the natural
world. Diagrams, the crisp didactic sort usually found in
botany books, provide the initial cue. From here, the
drawings are added to and subtracted from over the
three-week duration of the exhibition. The residues of
previous drawings are left on surfaces as scaffolding for
subsequent drawings. As a series of ongoing a constantly
evolving works, the decision-making process of
what-should-come-next takes place within the gallery. The
gallery becomes a place of action with the works-in-progress
functioning as a part performance; where being present and
active in the exhibition space, bridges the gap between
artist and public. Runs Until 7 May 2005 Blue Oyster
West side House Work. Curated by Danae Mossman
Artists: Regan Gentry, Emma Smith, Ros Cameron, Louise
Tulett House Work reconstructs the notion of the domestic
interior through the work of four emerging Wellington
artists. The work of all four will be in some way based on
the notion of memory and experience, expressed via found and
made objects and sound. Home is where the Art is…soft,
charming and burning with irony. Framed by nostalgia that
centres obliquely on domestic, family and familiar, House
Work meditates on an ironic Kitsch sensibility. Offering up
familiar spaces that are also uneasy with abandonment and
displacement, the show can be seen like the rooms in a
house, both through individual works and as a whole, and
Mossman invites you to slip on your slippers and glide
through the show with your cuppa and a hottie. Runs Until
25 May 2005 Blue Oyster Blue Oyster Birthday Show
This is an annual event where the Blue Oyster celebrates
its anniversary by calling for proposals for a themed group
show. Historically the shows have been themed to correspond
with the kinds of gifts that people traditionally buy for
married couples on their wedding anniversary, paper, cotton,
leather etc which has provided the framework of a theme
without being too restrictive. This year’s theme is still
under construction and will be announced shortly. The
purpose of the show is to throw open an opportunity for
artists who for various reasons may not be part of the
programme with a solo project. We are always aware as we
reach the end of another year of operation that we need to
remain connected with the community that we are supposedly
here to serve. The opportunity to exhibit in a group show
can give a sense of inclusion and personal investment to the
artists who support the Blue Oyster long term by showing up
and discussing the other projects we host. The birthday show
openings are a real birthday celebration. 28 May - 19
June 2005 Blue Oyster Upper, Lower and Dark Side
galleries Blue Oyster Gallery, Basement, Moray Chambers,
30 Moray Place, Dunedin Contact for enquiries: Ali
Bramwell, phone (03) 479 0197 Regent Theatre The Pink
Floyd Experience The Pink Floyd Experience returns to New
Zealand for its final NZ tour featuring their critically
acclaimed stage show “The Wall”. The Experience has
continued to develop and elevate the standard of this show
and it returns to NZ bigger and better than before. The show
also features a selection of classic Floyd songs and the
sophisticated sound and light show the Experience are
renowned for. 8 May 2005, 7.00pm Contact for
enquiries: Darren Whittaker, phone 021 344 252 QUEEN -
It’s A Kinda Magic After a triumphant and sold-out
international tour last year, the most sensational Queen
tribute ever staged is set to tour New Zealand with more
special effects, more theatrics, and more Queen magic! The
public demanded more of this show and Craig Pesco and his
band are ready to deliver the ultimate Queen experience.
Based on the 1986 Queen World Tour, QUEEN - It’s A Kinda
Magic delivers the energy, costumes and showmanship of
Freddie Mercury and the world’s greatest rock band, Queen,
in a way that transports the audience back in time. Queen
achieved 23 Top Ten Hits, 43 Top Forty Hits and every one of
their albums reached the top of the album charts, making
them one of the biggest bands ever to come out of the UK.
In 1991 Queen came to an untimely end with the death of
Freddie Mercury, one of the most loved and charismatic front
men in the music business. Freddie oozed energy, stage
presence and a love of rock music. QUEEN - It’s A Kinda
Magic ’s Craig Pesco recreates all these traits and delivers
the ultimate portrait of Freddie Mercury, leaving audiences
spellbound and screaming for more by the end of the night.
9 May 2005, 8.00pm The Regent 24-Hour Book Sale The
Regent 24 Hour Book Sale celebrates 25 years since it all
began. This is New Zealand's largest sale of used books,
opening the doors at 12noon on Friday 20 May and running
uninterrupted for 24 hours of fun with continuous book
bargains and live entertainment. All proceeds are used to
develop the Regent, one of New Zealand's most beautiful old
theatres. 20 May 2005, 12 noon - 21 May 2005, 12 noon
Royal New Zealand Ballet - The Peugeot Season of A
Million Kisses To My Skin Passion is palpable in the
Royal New Zealand Ballet's new triple bill. With its rise
and shine charm, Sir Kenneth MacMillan's Concerto has become
one of the legendary choreographer's most popular works.
Revelling in the airy textures of Shostakovich's piano
concerto, the performers put on a sparkling display of
technical virtuosity. Riveting and ritualistic, Javier De
Frutos' Milagros is set to Stravinsky's iconic Rite of
Spring. The critical sensation of the Ballet's recent UK
tour, the Financial Times declared Milagros a “brilliantly
imagined, dazzling response to the score”. Effortlessly
elegant, sublimely beautiful, David Dawson's A Million
Kisses to My Skin is a lyrical extension of Bach's piano
concerto. First performed by Dutch National Ballet in 2000,
Dawson breathes free-flowing movement into classical ballet.
24 May 2005, 7.30pm Contact for enquiries: George
Hills, phone (04) 381 9018 or 021 848 481, email
george@nzballet.org.nz Regent Theatre, 17 The Octagon, Dunedin Contact for
bookings and enquiries: Regent Theatre Ticketek, phone (03)
477 8597 Dunedin Public Art Gallery Gretchen Albrecht:
Paintings This exhibition showcases a selection of
evocative, richly coloured and often spectacular paintings
by one of New Zealand’s leading abstractionists. This
exhibition focuses on her signature hemisphere and oval
works, and ranges from pieces made during Albrecht’s Frances
Hodgkins residency in Dunedin in 1981 through to recent
works. A Dunedin Public Art Gallery exhibition Runs
Until 8 May 2005 John Kinder’s New Zealand Few people
realise that the Reverend Dr John Kinder was the only 19th
century New Zealand artist to work with both painting and
photography as visual mediums. Such a combined visual talent
was not only exceptional in New Zealand - it has very few
19th century international parallels. John Kinder’s New
Zealand is the fist exhibition to survey Kinder’s twin
achievements as an artist of paint as well as the camera.
An Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki touring exhibition.
Runs Until 8 May 2005 Hotbed: Loans, Purchases and
Gifts The word ‘collection’ suggests static objects
stored in temperature-controlled rooms. This late-summer
show, however, reveals the Gallery’s contemporary collection
as a place of heat, bizarre beauty and unstable energy - a
hotbed of growth and change. Featuring the work of Jae Hoon
Lee, Bill Hammond, Seraphine Pick, 2005 Frances Hodgkins
fellow Rohan Wealleans and others, Hotbed showcases art in
which nature gets pushed to unnatural extremes, paint bulges
and peels, and familiar objects grow minds of their own.
Runs Until 12 May 2005 Joanna Braithwaite: Wonderland
The world of Joanna Braithwaite's Wonderland is part
menagerie, part bestiary, and part human zoo. Her richly
brushed canvases are places where the laws of nature are
calmly bent, and wonderful hybrids emerge. Snakes grow into
swans, frogs rain from the sky, and humans are lofted
skyward by birds and butterflies. Braithwaite paints her
strange creatures with such assurance that they seem
perfectly natural. In the process, she reminds us how
strange 'the natural' really is. Organised in
collaboration with Christchurch Art Gallery Runs Until 15
May 2005 Big Wall: Pip Culbert Pip Culbert takes
everything but the seams away from familiar fabric objects,
and what is left provides a lot to look at and think about.
In this new work, Culbert has cut apart and opened up
thirty-six domestic aprons. Floating on the Big Wall, they
form a strange new graphic alphabet - an array of signs and
gestures that the original aprons never dreamed they
contained. Runs Until 29 May 2005 Frances Hodgkins:
Daughter of Dunedin Daughter of Dunedin is the second
exhibition in the gallery permanently devoted to the works
of one of New Zealand’s most highly regarded artists,
Frances Hodgkins. The exhibition offers the viewer an
insight into the artist’s early life and work. A Dunedin
Public Art Gallery exhibition Ongoing exhibition Sara
Hughes: Love Me Tender Sara Hughes brings colour and life
to the Dunedin Public Art Gallery’s Otago Daily Times
Gallery with her distinctive variations on the Paisley
patterns that Scottish settlers brought to Dunedin. Cut from
pre-painted sheets of sticky vinyl, Hughes’ Paisley shapes
stretch and flex as if manipulated on a computer screen -
nineteenth century forms refreshed by twenty-first century
technology. A Dunedin Public Art Gallery exhibition
Ongoing Exhibition Dunedin Public Art Gallery, 30 The
Octagon, PO Box 5045, Dunedin Contact for enquires: Tim
Pollock, phone (03) 474 3243 Dunedin Botanic Gardens
HortTalks - Attracting Native Birds to Your Garden
Native trees attract native plants because they provide a
year round food supply, even in the dead of winter. Birds
eat their berries and flowers and leave us with the sound of
their birdsong. Philip Dunn from Ribbonwood Nurseries will
explore how to increase biodiversity in your own backyard.
13 May 2005 Dunedin Botanic Garden, Cnr Great King
Street & Opoho Road Contact for enquiries: Clare Fraser,
phone (03) 474 9649 Otago Settlers Museum Arcadian
Dreams The imaginings of R A Lawson and George O’Brien in
19th Century Dunedin. Working as a draughtsman for Scottish
architect Robert Lawson meant that elegant Gothic Revival
buildings became prominent in the colonial watercolours of
Otago painted by the Irishman George O’Brien. The Otago
Settlers Museum and Hocken Library collections are richly
endowed with many examples of O’Brien’s idealised landscapes
of the region, including bird’s eyes view of the Otago
Peninsula. These are brought together with period
photographs to enable visitors to compare the ideal and the
real. Runs Until 29 May 2005 Family Silver Collections
and Connections Silver is a magnet for memories. Passed
down through families, organisations and institutions,
silver carries its history in its many decorative forms, but
also through marks, inscriptions and stories. Some objects
in this exhibition tell the stories of influential people in
the community, including founders of the Otago settlement
such as William Cargill and the whaler Johnnie Jones. Others
represent the merest traces of people’s lives in an initial
on the handle of a spoon or a photograph in a locket. The
pieces in Family Silver range from sentimental trinkets to
examples of full-blown Victorian splendour; all have been
selected from the Otago Settlers Museum collection. Runs
Until 29 May 2005 Across the Ocean Waves What was it
like crossing the oceans to come here in a sailing ship?
The core of this new display is an accurate recreation of
the steerage quarters of an immigrant ship bound for Otago
in the days of sail. Visitors are welcome to climb into a
bunk or sit at the central table and imagine what life would
have been like cooped up for 100 or more days at sea. Short
video presentations bring the era to life. Death and
disaster, fun and romance, the misery of seasickness and the
excitement of arrival are all showcased. A baby dies,
fighting breaks out among the single girls, and there is
dancing and a stolen kisses. This is an interactive
exhibit, which will seize the imagination and transport you
back to the epic voyages made by Otago’s nineteenth century
ancestors. Climb aboard and see for yourself what their
great migration was all about. Ongoing Exhibition
Otago Settlers Museum, 31 Queens Gardens, Dunedin
Contact for enquiries: Tim Pollock, phone (03) 474 3242
Otago Museum Photo Lightscapes This travelling
exhibition has already shown in Switzerland and Vietnam and
is brought to New Zealand with the assistance of Pro
Helvetia: Arts Council of Switzerland. Photo Lightscapes
consists of 80 photographs, representing 10 photographers
from four different countries: Australia, New Zealand,
Vietnam and Switzerland. The photographs in this exhibition
encompass the theme of Light and Colour, displaying an
intriguing blend of artificial lighting and natural
landscapes that result in what can be best described as
“photo-canvases”. This exhibition promises to be a
mesmerising experience. Runs Until 26 June 2005
Special Exhibitions Gallery Snail Mail - Wish You Were
Here Snail Mail - Wish You Were Here is a unique
exhibition of fantastic postcards and is a co-operative
venture with MacAndrew Intermediate School and the Arts
Quest Trust. An estimated 500 postcards will be on display
by local, national and international artists, as well as by
students from the school. Snail Mail - Wish You Were Here
reveals the history of postcards and also includes items
from the Otago Museum collections. The postcards will be on
sale at the Museum Shop. Proceeds raised will be given to
MacAndrew Intermediate School to help find art education.
The Museum will also offer creative workshops and community
programmes to accompany this unique exhibition. Runs
Until 10 July 2005 People of the World Gallery Guided
Tours Take a ‘Highlights of the Museum’ guided tour and
learn some inside knowledge about various aspects that the
Museum has on offer and/or take a guided tour of ‘Southern
Land, Southern People’ and gain a greater understanding, of
the Southern region. ‘Highlights of the Museum’ guided
tours are available at 11.30am and ‘Southern Land, Southern
People’ guided tours are available at 3.30pm (and other
times by prior arrangement). Ongoing Service - 11.30am
and 3.30pm daily Lunchtime Music A range of musicians
will liven up the atrium with live performances each week.
This is now a regular fixture but is subject to change
according to function demands. Museum Foyer, Fridays and
Saturdays between 12 noon and 1.30pm Discovery World
Science Shows These excellent shows are now run by the
Museum’s Science Communicators. Discovery World,
Saturdays & Sundays at 11.00am, 1.00pm and 3.00pm Gallery
Talks Each day, the Otago Museum Communicators present
fascinating 15-minute gallery talks on objects or themes of
particular interest from the Museum's galleries. Ongoing
Service, 2.00pm Daily Search Centre Otago Museum’s
Search Centre research facility provides an inviting
opportunity for visitors to engage in further research on
objects or themes in the galleries of interest to them. It
will also be the first stop for the identification of items
members of the public bring into the Museum, a service that
annually attracts a huge number of objects or specimens.
Well resourced, with swift new computers, microscopes,
modern journals and a great variety of new books, the Search
Centre offers a variety of options for seeking further
information. Set in a comfortable and relaxing environment
the Search Centre is the perfect place in which to think,
read , study, or research. Ongoing Service Search
Centre Weekend Presentations The Museum’s Search Centre
Communicators have developed a series of Search Centre
Weekend Presentations designed to help familiarise people
with the excellent resources provided by this facility.
Ongoing Service, Weekends at 11.30am and 2.30pm
Ongoing Exhibitions The Museum’s timbered Victorian
gallery, the Animal Attic , houses an extensive collection
of natural history specimens from around the world,
re-displayed as they would have been in the late 1800s. A
‘museum within a museum’, this gallery is unique in New
Zealand. Explore the Tangata Whenua Gallery with its
impressive displays of Maori Cultural artefacts, including a
stunning collection of Southern Maori material. The Pacific
Culture Galleries display outstanding collections from
Polynesia and Melanesia. People of the World has world
archaeological treasures including ancient Greek pottery; a
mummy and other fascinating artefacts from Ancient Egypt; a
striking collection of swords; exquisite decorative arts
from Asia and Europe and a superb array of costume and
textiles. Walk the length of the giant Fin Whale in the
Maritime Gallery , and then take in the intricate detail of
a wealth of nautical artefacts. Come face to face with the
extinct giant moa in the Extinction and Survival area and
see one of the few complete moa eggs in the world. Otago
Museum, 419 Great King Street, Dunedin Contact for
enquiries: Annabelle Boelema, phone (03) 474 7474 ext 845,
www.otagomuseum.govt.nz Milford Galleries - Glass Invitational NZ The Glass
Invitational NZ curated by Stephen Higginson is the premier
glass exhibition in New Zealand surveying major achievement
and innovation of the preceding two years. NZ art glass is
internationally renowned, distinctive and imbued with
character. One of the significant strengths is revealed by
its variety: the geometric abstract concerns of Borrella,
the layered gestural forms of Amsel, the devotional vase of
Robinson, the pan-Pacific language of Siddell's necklaces
contrast sharply with the domestic narrative of Fairclough
and McClure's sophisticated remodelling of everyday objects.
Featured artists in this exhibition include, Claudia
Borrella, Galia Amsel, Ann Robinson, Emily Siddell, Wendy
Fairclough and Elizabeth McClure with other work by Garry
Nash, Jim Dennison and Leanne Williams. The Glass
Invitational NZ exhibition in Dunedin is part of a national
tour Runs Until 31 May 2005 Milford Galleries Dunedin,
18 Dowling Street, Dunedin Contact for enquiries: Karen
Trebilcock, phone (03) 477 8275 Hocken Library Das
Endeavour: sculpture by Evan Jones with Art from Captain
Cooks Voyages curated by Anne Harlow An installation of
figurative sculpture and artefacts in which Evan Jones
(completing his Master of Fine Arts) engages ideas
associated with the museum, colonial heroism and the
collection of heritage. Insignificant details in history
are distorted and re-presented by Jones as fact, with
particular reference drawn to James Cook, Bernini and
Wedgwood. Painstakingly crafted and Neo-classical in style
- yet made from the hobbyist material “Das” (an
air-hardening polymer clay) - Jones’ work in humorous and
intimate. These works are combined with prints, paintings
and books from the Hocken Collections related to Captain
Cooks voyaging in the Pacific. Runs Until 18 June 2005
Hocken Library, cnr Anzac Avenue & Parry Street, Dunedin
The New Zealand Post Book
Awards for Children and Young Adults are annual awards
recognising the best in New Zealand books for children and
teenagers. Books are judged in four categories: Young Adult
Fiction, Junior Fiction, Non Fiction and Picture Book.
Dunedin City Library, Moray Place, Dunedin