Notes
What's your problem, Kazanski?

What's your problem, Kazanski?

Tony Scott, 1944 - 2012

Notes
Life imitates... well, you know

Life imitates... well, you know

Are repair works in Christchurch becoming so extreme that they could start to compete with contemporary art? It's a nice thought.

Exhibition

Justene Williams: She Came Over Singing Like a Drainpipe Shaking Spoon Infused Mixers

Australian artist Justene Williams uses performance and ephemeral materials to produce a sensory overload of shapes, patterns and colours in the vibrantly theatrical video work.

Notes
Animals

Animals

The Gallery's Registration department keeps a close watch on our collection of art, with regular audits to make sure all is as it should be.

Notes
Letter from America

Letter from America

Our colleague Nathan Pohio is having a rare old time in Sante Fe, New Mexico.

Notes
“Art is not what you see, but what you make others see.”

“Art is not what you see, but what you make others see.”

I have to agree with Edgar Degas.

The finishing touches to our new shop are up and they look great (thanks to our designer, Peter Bray).  

 

Article
Good game, but is it art

Good game, but is it art

Like any young medium, video games increasingly find themselves the subject of that age old question: is it art? Play itself has a strong presence in the artworld, from Yoko Ono's all-white chess set Play It By Trust to the amusing interactions possible with Franz West's Adaptives, but video games are often regarded with suspicion. Aren't they all just shooting and looting? And even if they're not, how can you tell if they're art?

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Round up

Round up

Life has been very hectic here at Christchurch Art Gallery over the past few weeks so here's a quick round up of our latest Outer Spaces offerings.

Collection
There is only one direction

Colin McCahon There is only one direction

This pared back, strikingly modern Madonna and child was painted in the Christchurch suburb of Phillipstown where Colin McCahon, perhaps New Zealand’s most acclaimed twentieth-century artist, lived with his family between 1948 and 1953. In contrast to the typically grander, often lavish treatment of this traditional subject within art history, McCahon’s composition is personal and startlingly bare, reduced to two naked figures framed within a rough oval that emphasises their close and enduring connection. Without haloes, thrones or attending angels, their identity is alluded to only through their grave sense of purpose and the work’s uncompromising title.

McCahon gave There is only one direction to the renowned writer James K. Baxter and his wife Jacqueline, marking the friendship between the two families and McCahon’s position as godfather to their young daughter Hilary. The painting sat above Baxter’s writing desk for many years.

(Unseen: The Changing Collection, 18 December 2015 – 19 June 2016)

Notes
Almost there...

Almost there...

The final paper sheet has been glued and the sealant is being applied on our newest Outer Spaces work, Tjalling is Innocent.

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