From 'Nothing' To 'Everything'
A large-scale art work featuring the word ‘everything’ has lit up the 110-metre-long, 13-metre-high light wall on Bledisloe wharf’s The Lightship, an installation by artist and acting head of Elam School of Fine Arts at the University of Auckland, Fiona Jack.
Everything, made up of seven
panels and nearly 8,500 LED lights, references Jack’s
first major public work in 1997, Nothing™, in its
typography and imagery, an artwork in which 33 billboards
were displayed around Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland 25 years
ago.
Nothing™ played with the language and style
of advertising. The billboards promoted, for instance,
“Nothing™, for the person with everything”,
“Nothing™, Beautiful just the way you are” and
“Nothing™, what you’ve been looking for.”
In
Nothing™ Jack was exploring the increasing
dominance of billboard space, then an emerging kind of real
estate in Auckland’s central city, owned and controlled by
advertising companies for the promotion of ideas and
products. The billboards were so convincing that they
prompted enquiries on where to buy Nothing™ - artwork
turned advertisement, advertisement turned artwork.
Jack
had been thinking about that previous work, and the changes
in Auckland she has witnessed since, when she was invited to
create an artwork for The Lightship, a site for contemporary
art launched by Ports of Auckland in 2020.
This prompted
her to reflect on the interplay between ‘nothing’ and
‘everything’.
“In the 1990s I was really interested
in concerns about globalisation and consumerism and that
period of massive growth. The ‘Nothing’ billboards were
a reaction to what I saw happening around me.”
One
of the key people who influenced her in the 1990s was Naomi
Klein, her writing on branding and corporate capitalism.
“Recently I’ve been reading her book on climate change,
This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate,
which triggered the use of ‘everything’ in this
artwork.
Nothing™ was a foil for the desire and
the consumerist tendencies at the heart of modern economies,
she says, “while ‘everything’ is about the much bigger
threat of climate change – everything is changing, and
everything needs to change, but most of us aren’t doing
anything, at least not enough, about it. But
‘everything’ is a grandiose word - everything is really
something.”
Fiona Jack is an artist who works in
ceramics, textiles, photography, posters, videos, and now,
digital video.
Her projects have often involved working
with local communities and are driven by socio-political
issues. In Our Red Aunt (2018) she produced a
collection of works responding and drawing attention to the
work and life of her great grand aunt, the prominent
Scottish activist and suffragette Helen Crawfurd (née
Jack), with a series of books, banners, sculptures, and
ceramics that explored her aunt’s legacy and the relevance
of her critical perspectives today.
In The Heraldry of
Presence (2014) and The Will of the People (2016)
she investigated the banners of social activism, tapestries
that draw attention to our political histories. In her book,
Living Halls (2010) she examined and catalogued New
Zealand’s radical commitment to building hundreds of
social halls as war memorials after the world wars.
And
her work, Port Workers (2012), featured 160 images of
the striking unionised waterside works at the Ports of
Auckland in the 2012 strike, which were made into posters
that were displayed around the city.
Each poster
consisted of a single portrait, with no text and no name,
capturing the ‘human-ness’ of ordinary, hardworking
waterside workers – a counter to how they had often been
portrayed, often as a ‘gang-like’ entity at the time of
the strike.
Jack agrees that there is some irony that her
latest work has been supported by the Ports of Auckland and
features on The Lightship, a site that wraps around the
western façade of the port's new car handling
building.
“The Ports know about the Port Workers
project, and that I did that, but I think they're okay with
this; that strike was a moment in history and part of port
life, and I happened to capture that through an
artwork.”
Everything will be accompanied by a
stand-alone podcast, which will be able to be listened to
wherever the listener is or activated as a self-guided audio
tour for a walk from Karangahape Road (where the
Nothing™ billboards were located) to
Everything on Bledisloe Wharf. It will feature
conversations with the artist and others, drawing attention
to changes in Auckland in the time between ‘nothing’ and
‘everything’.
Everything is on display from 9
February to 30 March
2022.