Collect / Project
Mark Adams/John Reynolds/Ann Shelton/Allan Thomas
40yearsvideoart.de
6 May – 13 July 2008
The Adam Art Gallery is pleased to present Collect/Project – two exhibitions that examine the activity of collecting and
celebrate its forms and subjects. One comes to the Gallery from Germany, the other is generated by the collecting
activities of the university.
The first, 40yearsvideoart.de sets out to comprehensively survey the history of video art made in Germany bringing
together the work of 60 artists from the 1960s to the present. It is the result of a major research initiative
undertaken by German institutions to ensure the survival and preservation of this medium.
This project has been made available by the Goethe Institut and is being staged simultaneously across three venues: St
Paul St in Auckland, the Govett-Brewster Art Gallery in New Plymouth and the Adam Art Gallery in Wellington. This will
allow audiences to encounter the resource in different ways in each context.
At the Adam Art Gallery, New Zealand artist Kim Paton has been invited to determine how viewers will experience the
works. Paton is known for her constructed situations that explore the structures, functions and systems of the built
environment. Here, she will create a platform for viewing, out of recycled furniture sourced from the University and its
environs. This makeshift structure will underline the portable nature of the exhibition and the medium which it
showcases.
In addition Adam Art Gallery Assistant Curator Laura Preston has compiled a revolving programme of screenings that
explore various approaches artists have taken to video—widely regarded as one of today’s key art forms. This will
provide insights into significant work by artists Joseph Beuys, Nam June Paik, Rosemarie Trockel, Wolf Vostell and more.
The second component of Collect/Project is an exhibition curated by Adam Art Gallery Director, Tina Barton, showcasing
three works recently acquired for the Victoria University Art Collection, by Mark Adams, John Reynolds and Ann Shelton,
together with an audio archive drawn from the extensive collection of sounds compiled by ethnomusicologist Allan Thomas.
All these works highlight the activities of passionate collectors who are determined to secure, preserve and pass on
knowledge about people, places and cultures.
Here, Mark Adams’s photographs from his Tatau series are featured, focusing on the work of Samoan tufuga tatatau (tattoo
artists), in particular Sulu‘ape Paulo II. Adams records with meticulous detail the continuing practice of tattooing as
it was undertaken in suburban Auckland in the 1970s, to show the survival of this art form as the embodied site of coded
cultural meaning.
John Reynolds takes all of the Maori words and phrases listed in the Dictionary of New Zealand English as the subject
for his more than 1,170-piece painting entitled Looking West, Late Afternoon, Low Water, 2007. This is a gesture that
celebrates the achievement of Harry Orsman, the lexicographer who spent his entire academic career at Victoria working
on this project.
Ann Shelton presents her major 26-part photographic installation: A Library to Scale, 2006, which documents the library
of scrapbooks filled with clippings from the daily newspaper, compiled by Frederick B Butler in his effort to chronicle
a vast array of subjects relating to life in his hometown, which is now held in Taranaki’s museum, Puke Ariki. Victoria
has purchased one part of this collection.
These three works, and various items designed to contextualise them, are accompanied by a selection of sounds compiled
by Allan Thomas as part of his Karanga Voices project. This project has seen Thomas and his students, over a 30-year
period, take field recordings of such unlikely musical subjects as train announcements, protest marches, fruit and
vegetable auctions and military drills.
The works provide intriguing insights into the important work of individuals who have dedicated themselves to preserving
and passing on words, patterns, sounds and moving images that help us understand who we are, where we come from, and the
nature of artistic practice.
The two exhibitions that make up Collect/Project alert us to the creative as well as the academic worth of such
endeavours. The exhibitions will be accompanied by a programme of talks, discussions and performances.
ENDS