Notes
A new sculpture for Christchurch

A new sculpture for Christchurch

A karanga competed with the familiar rebuild soundtrack of hammering and excavating on Tuesday morning, as Lonnie Hutchinson's I like your form was launched at The Commons, on the former site of the Crowne Plaza hotel. Looping through the wooden Arcades frames, the 50 metre-long work reimagines a Maori hinaki, or eel trap, on an epic scale.

Notes
Collection Tarot

Collection Tarot

One of the things I've really missed in these post-earthquake days is contact with collection works in the storage areas.

Notes
Goosebumps

Goosebumps

It's sixty years today since Christchurch's most notorious murder.

Notes
This will make your head hurt

This will make your head hurt

The hardest working video-making musicians OK Go (and, presumably, a fairly large team of helpers) are at it again.

Notes
Slow-mo-tastic

Slow-mo-tastic

My friend's daughter visited our ArtBox show Burster Flipper Wobbler Dripper Spinner Stacker Shaker Maker (on till September 28!) on a school trip recently and was captivated by Steve Carr's Screen Shots videos, in which a paint-filled balloon bursts in super slow motion.

Notes
Human Beans Rejoice!

Human Beans Rejoice!

Fantastic to hear that Jess Johnson has won Australia's 2014 National Works on Paper Prize.

Exhibition

Edwards+Johann: Rebels, Knights and Other Tomorrows

Combining vividly imagined photographs with sculptural elements, Christchurch-based collaborative duo Edwards+Johann present an enigmatic and playful installation laced with tension and possibility.

Notes
Automated Colour Field (variation 4) field by Rebecca Baumann

Automated Colour Field (variation 4) field by Rebecca Baumann

This article first appeared as 'Colour + light' in The Press on 2 May 2014.

Notes
David Brokenshire 1925 - 2014

David Brokenshire 1925 - 2014

We were sorry to hear of the recent death of Christchurch potter David Brokenshire, who was known for delicate and expressive ceramic works that reflected his fascination with the natural world.

Notes
All change

All change

Because not everything has to stay the same.

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