Dan Arps
After Hobson Gardens
30 May - 6 July
Preview Wednesday 29 May 6-8pm
Zac Langdon-Pole
Pale Ideas
30 May - 3 August
Preview Wednesday 29 May 6-8pm
Dan Arps - After Hobson Gardens
Michael Lett is pleased to present a solo exhibition of new work by Dan Arps titled After Hobson Gardens. In 2011 Arps presented an exhibition titled Hobson Gardens, taking its name from an apartment building near the
artist’s home. The postcard invitation depicted the car park entrance with the words ‘Hobson Gardens’ in all-caps, bold
Helvetica text, above a three-meter high electronic gate and stark surroundings of a busy one way street heading to
downtown Auckland. At the time the artist was drawn to the euphemistic quality of the name - one that could apply
equally to a prison, retirement home, or mental institution.
Since 2011 the Hobson Gardens apartment building has been subject to a series of events that have meant it now stands as
an exemplar of the current political and economic spectrum. Having been forever 'leaky' as a result of shortcuts taken
during its erection, in 2012 the original construction company, Mainzeal, was contracted for a sum of $15 million to
make the building watertight and replace damaged roofing and cladding. On the 6th February 2013 Mainzeal was placed in
receivership, and work on the building came to a halt.
After Hobson Gardens sees the artist return to this site as a starting point for an investigation of Auckland’s urban aesthetics. Conceived
as a sequel, After Hobson Gardens invokes the idea of evolution - not in the sense of things getting better but rather things simply surviving and
continuing. After Hobson Gardens will present a re-imagining of a post-apocalyptic Auckland. It is an anticipation of the numerous crises (ecological,
financial, social and environmental) that are approaching this city, and others like it around the world, with a
particular focus on the current political debates surrounding housing and lifestyle choices in Auckland.
Dan Arps (born 1976) lives and works in Auckland. His work explores, and responds to, the contemporary urban environment
fusing architecture, public space, nomadic structures, politics, philosophy and history, while expanding on Modernist
traditions of abstraction, alienation, and the everyday. Recent exhibitions include; Vision Mixer (group) 2013, Suter Art Gallery, Nelson; Local Knowledge (group) 2012, Dowse Art Museum, Lower Hutt; Abstracts and Vision Statements, 2012, Neon Parc, Melbourne; Hobson Gardens, 2011, Michael Lett, Auckland; Michael Lett, Frieze Art Fair, 2011, London.
Arps was the recipient of the 2010 Walters Prize and in 2011 Affirmation Dungeon, a major monograph focused on Arps’
work was published in association with Clouds and Michael Lett.
Zac Langdon-Pole - Pale Ideas
Michael Lett is pleased to present a nine week solo exhibition by Zac Langdon-Pole entitled Pale Ideas. Occupying the smaller room at the back of the gallery, Langdon-Pole will present an evolving show of new work.
The exhibition will include a range of paintings, some re-stretched inside out, some not. Curtains that bear the residue
and sunburn of many years hanging in front of windows and doorways have also been stretched flat, creating concrete,
tautological images of compressed time. Curious arrangements of leaves may be also found around the gallery floors.
While at first glance these may appear just like leaves blown into the gallery, certain clusters are in fact mimicked in
the exact arrangement elsewhere within the building.
Zac Langdon-Pole (born 1988) lives and works in Auckland. He graduated from Elam School of Fine Arts, Auckland, with a
BFA (First Class Honors) 2010. Recent solo exhibitions include; Soft Quick Thoughts, Window, Auckland; Nothing by Itself, 2012, Michael Lett, Auckland; Standing Like Spears, 2011, split/fountain, Auckland.
Please join us this Saturday 25 May, at 2pm for the third realisation of Upright Piano by Samuel Holloway et al., with pianist Glenda Keam.
ENDS