Paul Gadsby’s most recent collection of work, “Takeaways” captures environmental issues and people’s impact on native
bird species and their habitat. The large vibrant paintings are showing at Aratoi Wairarapa Museum of Art and History
until July 28th.
Gadsby writes, “In each painting, I depict an issue that is current, in our faces and needs immediate attention.”
The public is invited to meet the artist:
Exhibition opening: Friday 31 May, 5.30
Public talk: Saturday 1 June 11am.
The political bird painting series includes such works as ‘Black-billed Blues’ which captures the impact humans have had
on the species and the environment through plastic waste.
‘Kahī Swansong’ is concerned with the habitat of the Kahī (Black Stilt) and the effects of high-intensity irrigation and
farming activities.
‘Matuku Moana’ speaks of Lake Wairarapa, and the results of farming practices and other human interventions, such as the
Ruamāhanga River diversion scheme.
In the painting ‘Te Tangi Toroa’, Gadsby looks at the disaster occurring by longline fishing and plastic ingestion
dumped by humans into the sea.
The style Gadsby employs in takeaways was influenced by the artist Don Binney.
Paul Gadsby – active with several art groups in the Wairarapa - was born in Christchurch in 1959. Primarily a
self-taught artist, he has only recently started painting again in 2012, after a long hiatus going back as far as the
mid-70s when he attended art classes at Mana College, Porirua, taught by Robyn Kahukiwa. Gadsby has exhibited at several
group shows at Alfred Memelink Artspace, Carterton Events Centre, NZ Academy of Fine Arts, and at Aratoi, most recently
in the 2017 Wairarapa Art Review.
Takeaways is Gadsby’s first solo exhibition and complements the WAI and WATER\WAY shows that have been drawing busloads
of schoolchildren for Aratoi’s free education programme, kindly supported by Masterton Trust Lands Trust and T G
Macarthy Trust.
Aratoi, celebrating its 50th year in 2019, is located at 12 Bruce St, Masterton.
Open daily 10am - 4pm.
Free entry / donations welcomed.
tel 06 370 0001