ART à la mode ♡
The Art Paper online bulletin
Print Archive: Rangi White’s Whakapapa Plasticus
Fergus Porteous on Rangi White’s Whakapapa Plasticus; Grace, 29 February – 30 March 2024.
Print Archive: George Watson, Filial
Lily McElhone on George Watson’s Filial; Envy6011, 9 September – 8 October 2022.
Print archive: Venereal Sacraments
Julia Craig on Owen Connors’ egg tempera paintings.
Print archive: Smooth Signs
From The Art Paper Issue 02—Romily Plourde Marbrook on Taylor J. Wagstaff’s Smooth Signs.
Print archive: On Openings, Daniel Strang’s filmic event
Daniel Strang’s digital video Openings is structured around a narrow schema: near-exhaustive documentation of every scene that depicts art exhibition openings from the history of cinema (1945 to 2020), arranged chronologically by the year of each film’s release.
Print archive: Imperial Vegetables, Lachlan Taylor on Ayesha Green’s I thought I heard you crying in the forest
“It’s a painting about power, and the ways that power is gained, maintained, coveted, stolen, and mourned through systems of representation.”
Print archive: Robyn Maree Pickens on Zina Swanson
In Zina Swanson's All My Sticks Have Auras, ”Meaning quivers between viewer and work, plant and human, and between each decomposing twig and the vibratory aura the artist depicts,” writes Robyn Maree Pickens in Issue 00.
Present Tense
Micheal Do, curator of the Auckland Art Fair Projects 2021, speaks to participating artists Casey Carsel, Tanya Martusheff, Lucy Meyle, Elisabeth Pointon, Becky Richards, and Ashleigh Taupaki, in a roundtable discussion with The Art Paper Editor-in-Chief, Becky Hemus.
Outtakes from our shoot with Issue 00 cover star Yona Lee
Yona Lee's sculptural practice combines elaborate linear structures of stainless steel tubing with everyday objects of urban and domestic spaces. Our inaugural Issue 00 features Lee photographed alongside a selection of her sculptures.
In print: George Watson on Robyn Kahukiwa
“Robyn Kahukiwa’s mahi toi is direct and bold, her paintings simultaneously embrace the warmth and richness of Te Ao Māori, of our values, spirituality, and practices whilst also depicting the fraught social realities for many Māori living in colonised Aotearoa,” writes George Watson in Issue 00.
In print: Priscilla Rose Howe on Susan Te Kahurangi King
“We have entered the realm of the otherworldly—the linear, the logical and the structured, folding inward and expanding outward upon the drawing plane. Her way of working has a strong sense of urgency and intuition, her mark-making has a zest that is distinguishably hers,” writes Priscilla Rose Howe on Susan Te Kahurangi King in Issue 00.
In print: Erin Griffey on Claudia Jowitt
“With Fijian heritage on her paternal side, Jowitt literally embeds her family roots––sea and land––into her works by incorporating shells and coral pieces found on the shoreline as well as traditional Fijian materials vau (Hibiscus fibre) and masi (Fijian white tapa),” writes Erin Griffey in Issue 00.
In print: Landshaping: Seeing differently with Conor Clarke, by Maya Love
“With words as her foundation, Conor Clarke walked around her neighbourhood, allowing intuitive associations to guide her choice of site and subject. She used a pinhole camera with no viewfinder, restricting her control over aesthetic choices and allowing for guesswork. The visual is no longer the only means of interpretation. Here, land is something to be smelt, touched, heard, felt and imagined,” writes Maya Love in Issue 00.
Print archive: The void and its parody: Thinking alongside Robert Jahnke’s Whenua kore, by Carl Mika
“Robert Janhke’s sculpture Whenua kore (2019) discloses significant possibilities for mātauranga Māori thought, raising the question of how Te Kore, or nothingness, impinges on our everyday activities,” writes Carl Mika in Issue 00.