RETROSPECT and Trick i-ey’e open at The Pah Homestead
MEDIA RELEASE: Monday 23 January
2012
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
…RETROSPECT
and Trick i-ey’e open at The Pah Homestead, TSB Bank
Wallace Arts Centre
The Wallace Arts Trust, guest curator Jo Mears and artist Rachael Linton present exhibitions RETROSPECT and Trick i-ey’e at The Pah Homestead, TSB Bank Wallace Arts Centre, opening on Tuesday 31 January at 6pm.
RETROSPECT, a contemporary
jewellery show, will be exhibited at The Pah Homestead until
15 April 2012 when it will tour to Wallace Gallery
Morrinsville from 19 April to 10 June. Curator Jo Mears
brings together the work of Peter Deckers, an important
mid-career New Zealand artist, and a high-quality selection
of contemporary jewellery. A twenty-strong contingent of New
Zealand emerging and established contemporary jewellers have
participated: Debbie Adamson, Vivien Atkinson, Renee Bevan, Nadene Carr, Jacqui
Chan, Kristin D’Agostino, Cath Dearsley, Gillian Deery, Sharon Fitness, Sunni Gibson, Victoria McIntosh, Ross Malcolm, Vaune
Mason, Jhana Millers, Neke
Moa, Shelley Norton, Lynsay Raine, Sarah Read, Nadine Smith and Raewyn Walsh.
Deckers, a senior
tutor at Whitireia Polytechnic in Porirua, is a contemporary
artist and craftsperson who exhibits with galleries
throughout New Zealand and internationally.
Many of the
artists invited to participate in RETROSPECT have exhibited
in projects curated by Peter Deckers and all have
established distinctive individual practices. Each artist
was invited to develop a new piece of work in response to
his or her individual practice.
RETROSPECT will bring a
high-quality arts experience to a new and diverse audience
at an important time on the New Zealand Contemporary
jewellery calendar. RETROSPECT opens a week before the
international jewellery conference JEMposium begins in Wellington.
Also opening on the 31st January is Trick i-ey’e, an exhibition of work by artist Rachael Linton including her 2008 film Sound Vision and three new kinetic works titled ‘Turning Phenomena’. Trick i-ey’e will be exhibited at The Pah Homestead until 25 March 2012.
Sound Vision explores the physical and psychological effects of colour, light and sound vibration and how they may be used as a means of therapy through film. The concept was realised during Linton’s Master of Design thesis in Digital Media, 2009.
Linton encourages visitors to view the spinning artworks ‘Turning Phenomena’ through their own mobile devices - phones and cameras - and compare what they see with their naked eye to what they see on the screen of their device.
At Massey University in Wellington Linton conducted many design experiments to discover imagery that may produce calming and/or stimulating responses within the viewer. Cymatics (visible sound and vibration), twirling dancers, flickering lights and writhing colours were united with harmonising vocal choirs and resonant sounds. Linton believes that, through the viewers’ interaction with Sound Vision, meditative states may be encouraged and people may realise their capacity to heal themselves.
The opening event will include a talk from Peter Deckers about RETROSPECT, and performances by dancer Vicki Szerdi and overtone singer Matt Reece to compliment the ideas explored in Trick i-ey’e.
The Pah Homestead, TSB Bank Wallace Arts Centre is located at 72 Hillsborough Road, Hillsborough, Auckland. The Art Centre’s opening hours are Tuesday – Friday 10am till 3pm, Saturday - Sunday 10am till 5pm. Entry is by donation.