Exhibition

Professor John Simpson's Gift of Books

A selection of the books given to the Gallery library by Professor John Simpson.

Collection
Manapouri Vessel 1

Daegan Wells Manapouri Vessel 1

Daegan Wells sourced the clay for Manapouri Vessel 1 at the shoreline of Lake Manapouri in Fiordland National Park. The artist moved to the area with his family in 1996 when his stepfather worked on the Manapōuri hydropower project. He recalls falling through a seam of clay on Frasers Beach as a child, and has returned to that same location to excavate this clay – drawing on his childhood memory as well as the sociopolitical history of the lake. Manapouri translates as anxious or sorrowful heart, and the lake was named by Māori for the two sisters, Moturua and Koronae, whose tears of grief are said to have created it. In the lead up to the 1972 election, Lake Manapouri dominated headlines as concerned locals protested against the proposed raising of the lake level to enable expansion of the hydropower scheme. The campaign launched by the Save Lake Manapouri Committees demonstrated the efficacy of grassroots protest in influencing Government policy and came to symbolise a sea change in New Zealanders' personal engagement with public environmental policy. Manapouri Vessel 1 was made during Wells’s tenure as the Olivia Spencer Bower Artist in Residence Ōtautahi. Wells had recently been exposed to the work of artist Yvonne Rust, and this roughly formed work is a celebration of Rust’s advocacy for the use of local clays and robust forms.

Melanie Oliver (2021)

Collection
Peha, Chef du District d'Opoulou/Le Fils de Peha

Jacques Marie Eugène Marescot-Duthilleul, Adolphe Jean-Baptiste Bayot Peha, Chef du District d'Opoulou/Le Fils de Peha

Jacques Marescot-Duthilleul’s double portrait of chief Pe’a and his son was published in France in 1842, from sketches made during a six-day visit to Apia on Upolu, Samoa in 1838. Pe’a was matai (principal chief) of Apia, recorded in captain Dumont d’Urville’s journal as ‘Pea-Pongui’. Tragically, Marescot-Duthilleul died during the return voyage in 1839.

(Out of Time, 23 September 2023 – 28 April 2024)

Collection
The Last Tenant

Ivy Fife The Last Tenant

Ivy Fife was strongly drawn to line and structure. Her landscape works often include trains, gates, farm buildings and railway signals, and she painted large shipping crates stacked on train wagons at Lyttelton port. When her old flat in St Elmo Courts – a 1930s high rise that stood not far from here – was being remodelled, she seized the opportunity to record the process. Here, light floods through a space that bristles with exposed wooden framing, creating a composition full of sharp angles and shadows. This chaotic scene is watched over by the artist’s cat; a small reminder of the apartment’s previous life.

(Absence, May 2023)

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