FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
TWO NEW EXHIBITIONS AT THE PHYSICS ROOM
Si c'est (if it is)
Fiona Amundsen & Tim Corballis
16 July–9 August 2008
Opening preview: Tuesday 15 July 2008, 5.30pm
Si c’est (if it is) is a collaboration between Fiona Amundsen and Tim Corballis, based on a sustained investigation of a specific urban
site: Wynyard Point (also known as the Tank Farm), a now largely demolished part of Auckland’s industrial waterfront.
The project creates a series of works in two different formats—photographs and written text(s)—that relate
artistically/aesthetically, while avoiding the primacy of one form over the other which is found in the standard
text-photo relationships, caption and illustration. Si c’est works with the unavoidable lack of equivalence between text and photo, and with their irreducible differences: linear
vs. planar, created vs. recorded, implicitly vs. explicitly narrative. In this regard, Amundsen’s photographs which
question and ironise any ‘scientific’ view of place will be juxtaposed with Corballis’s invented interviews of
tangential relevance to the site, which in themselves are reminiscent of oral-histories or courtroom cross-questioning.
Disrupting our attempt to understand the site under investigation, each artist’s work brings into focus the subjectivity
behind their attempts. The juxtaposition of these two forms of documentation further complicates our view suggesting at
least two (eye and voice), or possibly multiple subjectivities, as the audience reads back and forth between photographs
and texts. Indeed, throughout this exercise if Si c’est reveals anything about Wynyard Point, it is that such sites can at best be viewed partially, through a range of
fragmented views that refuse synthesis.
Auckland-based artist Fiona Amundsen graduated with a Bachelor of Arts (in Social Anthropology) from the University of
Auckland before continuing at the University of Waikato, graduating with a Bachelor of Social Science with Honours in
Anthropology and a Master of Social Sciences in 2005. She currently lectures in Art Theory/History and Photography at
Auckland University of Technology. Recent solo exhibitions include Miracle on the Han River, Changdong Studio Gallery, Seoul (2008), Garden Place, Roger Williams Contemporary, Auckland (2006); Garden Place, McNamara Gallery, Wanganui (2006); Time Trials, Canberra Contemporary Art Space, Canberra (2004). Selected group exhibitions include Primary Products, Adam Art Gallery, Wellington (2007); Telecom Prospect 2007: New Art New Zealand, City Gallery, Wellington (2007); Contemporary New Zealand Photographers, Starkwhite, Auckland (2005); Slow Release, Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne (2002).
Wellington-based writer Tim Corballis is the author of the novels Below (VUP, 2001), Measurement (VUP, 2002) and The Fossil Pits (VUP, 2005) as well as numerous short stories, essays and reviews in magazines, newspapers, literary journals and
anthologies. He was awarded the Adam Foundation Prize and a Modern Letters Fellowship for his work in 2000 towards the
MA in Creative Writing at Victoria University of Wellington and in 2003 was listed amongst the top ten New Zealand
writers under 40 by the New Zealand Listener. In 2002 he was the Randell Cottage Writer in Residence, and in 2005–2006
he spent a year in Berlin as the Creative New Zealand Berlin Writer in Residence. He was a judge of the Montana New
Zealand Book Awards in 2008. Corballis is currently editing Landfall 216 on the theme of ‘utopias’, working on a novella
(possibly the first of a series) which concerns early English psychoanalyst Joan Riviere, and beginning a PhD
dissertation on Frankfurt School aesthetic theory in the New Zealand context.
During the conversation sustained in the lead up to this project for The Physics Room, Amundsen and Corballis also
collaborated on a series of page works for Enjoy’s recent publication, Public Good (2008). Issues of Public Good will be available via The Physics Room during the exhibition of Si c’est (if it is).
Twin Peaks
Brenda Nightingale
16 July–9 August 2008
Opening preview: Tuesday 15 July 2008, 5.30pm
Installing a reticent thicket of faux Christmas trees in The Physics Room’s rear gallery, Brenda Nightingale’s quiet
collection, built up over a number of years, hums with all the promise and provocation of nostalgia’s disconcerting
residues of slippage, silence and shadows.
Laid out on discarded tracts of Axminster carpet, in a move that moulds the gallery into an echo-chamber for the
laudable domestic interiors and accoutrements of post-war prosperity, Nightingale’s forest mimes retrograde sentimental
tropes through an invocation of the same drifting temporality that remains deeply imbedded within the collector’s
impulse.
Presenting a tableau that yokes the coercive charisma of the festive season with the neurotic banalities and
strife-filled irregularities of the domestic scene, Nightingale’s installation also provocatively orients itself in
relation to the surreal intrigue of David Lynch’s Twin Peaks series. Mimicking the same ambivalent and oddly public arbors present in Nightingale’s recent suite of watercolour
works, for The Physics Room Nightingale plots something equally sparse and unnerving as a result.
Brenda Nightingale completed her M.F.A. in Painting at the University of Canterbury in 2008, having graduated with her
B.F.A. from the School of Fine Arts there in 1998. She shows regularly with Jonathan Smart Gallery and has also
exhibited at the Centre of Contemporary Art, The Robert McDougall Art Gallery, The High Street Project and as part of
The Otira Project in 1999. Recent solo exhibitions at Jonathan Smart Gallery include: Nightingale (2008), Dis-possessed (2005), Way Out West (2004), The Vermilion Paintings (2002), Gauge (2001) and Fleur de Lis (2001). Publications/artist’s books include: Nightingale (2008), Way Out West (2004) and Pictures of Knitting (1997).
The Physics Room receives major funding from Creative New Zealand/Toi Aotearoa.
ENDS