6 September 2011 MEDIA RELEASE
Auckland artist turns trash into triumph at Wallace Art Awards
An Auckland artist whose work seeks to illuminate links between consumerism and waste has been named as this year’s
recipient of the Fulbright-Wallace Arts Trust Award, and will undertake a three month residency at Headlands Center for
the Arts near San Francisco. Brydee Rood is an installation, performance and video artist who uses items associated with
consumption and waste – including LED fairy lights and brightly coloured rubbish bags – to draw attention to the
materialism of modern societies.
A recent example of Brydee’s attention-grabbing work is Müll Ballon Wolke Kanal-Projekt, in which she floated a manned,
cloud-like vessel of inflated rubbish bags down a Berlin canal to the applause of ferry loads of tourists. It was a
video of this live “intervention” which caught the eye of the Fulbright-Wallace Arts Trust Award selection panel, who
selected Brydee to carry out new creative work on a similar theme in the United States.
“I am captivated by processes of consumption, in relation to waste and the end product of capitalism,” Brydee says of
her work. “As an artist from New Zealand, half a hemisphere away, I am very curious to experience American cultures and
patterns of waste. I’ll actively and intuitively discover local habitats (rubbish dumps, waterways, public spaces) and
explore plastic pollution and ideas of value and waste in a changing world.”
Brydee Rood graduated with a Master of Fine Arts degree in installation and sculptural practice from the University of
Auckland’s Elam School of the Arts in 2007. She has previously been awarded residencies in Holland and Germany, and
lived and worked in Mexico and Japan in addition to New Zealand. She has exhibited twice in the US before – in Miami and
New York – but not spent significant time there.
Brydee’s video work Müll Ballon Wolke Kanal-Projekt (2011) will be part of the exhibition of winners and selected
finalists from this year’s 20th annual Wallace Art Awards, which is showing at the Pah Homestead TSB Bank Wallace Arts
Centre in Auckland until 16 October, and then at The Dowse Art Museum in Lower Hutt from 29 October – 4 December.
Fulbright New Zealand and the James Wallace Arts Trust partnered in 2009 to offer a joint annual award for an
outstanding mid-career or senior New Zealand visual artist to work alongside American and other international
artists-in-residence at Headlands Center for the Arts in the United States. Past recipients of the award were Richard
Maloy and last year’s winner Mark Braunias, who is one of a dozen artists currently in residence at Headlands.
ENDS