(Un)conditional IV: Eve Armstrong, John Vea, & Mike Hewson
Media release – 2 August, 2018
(Un)conditional IV Eve Armstrong, John Vea, & Mike Hewson
Exhibition opening: Sunday 5 August, 2pm
Exhibition runs: Monday 6 – Friday 31 August 2018
Image: Eve Armstrong, Trading Table, The Suter Art Gallery, 2018. Image: The Physics Room.
In March, collection items from the Ashburton Art Gallery collection were exhibited alongside work created by Eve Armstrong, John Vea, and Mike Hewson in (Un)conditional I at The Physics Room in Christchurch. Now, in August, Armstrong, Vea, and Hewson have made new work responding to the (Un)conditional series of exhibitions, which explores the concepts of hosting, being a guest, trade, exchange, reciprocity, utu, and manaakitanga, as well as Ashburton as a particular site.
Earlier this year, Vea travelled to Ashburton to conduct research and talanoa with migrants and newcomers to the area to understand how locals welcomed these groups. A number of factors meant that Vea was unable to reach these communities and as a result the majority of his experiences were with migrant business owners in the town area. Working outwards from the challenges he faced in locating and contacting these
communities, Vea has created a suite of rendered property development drawings to propose an international food court for the now vacant iSite building to suggest an environment where a host of social interactions can occur.
This will be the third and final iteration of Armstrong’s Trading Table as part of the (Un)conditional series of exhibitions in 2018. The table now carries trades from The Physics Room in Christchurch (7-9 March) and The Suter Gallery in Nelson (17 & 18 March). These remainders embody the previous interactions and multiple currencies including ideas, information, skills, services, and items. Occurring over two days in Ashburton (4 & 5 August), Armstrong will host the table and solicit exchanges from participants under the tagline “almost everything accepted”.
Hewson has been developing his line of hand-painted tiles—the eponymous Hewsonclad—since the beginning of 2018. Designed to be distributed at a price point available to the everyday consumer rather than a small group of art collecting elite, (Un)conditional IV showcases three Ashburton palettes—bush, tussock, and alpine—borrowed from a trio of A.A Deans paintings. Endlessly modular, the exhibition provides an opportunity for audiences to imagine Hewsonclad in their homes via a variety of hanging arrangements. It is hoped that eventually Hewsonclad will find a distributor amongst New Zealand’s larger hardware and designware chains to fully circumvent the gallery system.
Free return bus to Ashburton Art Gallery: * Bus leaves Worcester Boulevard (outside TPR) at 12.30pm Sunday 5 August to arrive at Ashburton Art Gallery for 2.00pm opening * Bus leaves Ashburton Art Gallery at 5.00pm to return to Worcester Boulevard There are 35 seats available Please contact Hope Wilson, Assistant Curator: hope@physicsroom.org.nz for reservations.
Public programming:
Sunday 5 August, 2pm: Join the artists and curator of the exhibition (Un)conditional IV for the opening at Ashburton Art Gallery. We may travel off-site to visit works installed across Ashburton.
Saturday 4 August: 12-4pm & Sunday 5 August: 11am-4pm Eve Armstrong will present her ongoing project Trading Table. Trading Table involves the artist setting up a table in a public place and inviting people to trade with her for something on the table. Trading Table deals in multiple currencies including ideas, information, skills, services and items. Most participants encounter the table unexpectedly and work with the artist and her assistants to devise a trade on the spot. These trades are simply written on fluorescent card and displayed on the table.
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Eve Armstrong holds a BFA from Elam School of Fine Arts (2003), and in 2006 was an inaugural recipient of the Arts Foundation of New Zealand New Generation Award. In 2017 Armstrong was the Dunedin Public Art Gallery Visiting Artist. She has exhibited widely throughout NZ including major solo exhibitions at Dunedin Public Art Gallery (2017),The Physics Room, Christchurch (2010), City Gallery Wellington (2007) and Artspace, Auckland (2005-6). Armstrong is represented by Michael Lett, Auckland.
John Vea is a Tamaki Makaurau based artist who works with sculpture, video, and performance art. Vea works with tropes of migration and gentri cation within Moana Nui a Kiwa. By enacting stories that have been collected through everyday interactions with people, both in his home community and abroad with a journalistic sensibility he offers a sometimes humorous and always powerfully symbolic emic viewpoint to the Western meta narrative. He gained a Master of Art and Design at Auckland University of Technology in 2015, where he is currently undertaking his Ph.D. candidature.
Mike Hewson alters civic sites to highlight pressing issues concerning that community. This involves transposing images or materials to cause hesitation and re ection on the path ahead. He received a Bachelors of [Civil] Engineering with First Class Honours from University of Canterbury, New Zealand and lives and works between New York and Sydney.