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CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Mana Tiriti: The Art of Protest and Partnership. 14 April–17 June 1990. Haeata Hineteiwaiwa te Whare 1990. Open gallery. ARTISTS Juliet Batten, Haeata (Tungia Baker, Ani Crawford, Hinemoa Hilliard, Robyn Kahukiwa, Rona Potiki, Irihapeti Ramsden, Rea Ropiha, Megan Tamati-Quennell), Robert Jahnke, Philip Kelly, Gerda Leenards, RobertPouwhare
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON It’s out of the way: few paths lead there, few people pass through. Hinterland II is the sequel to Sandra Schmidt’s 2006 Hinterland show at Wellington's Mary Newton Gallery. The works in that show explored ideas of pressure and friction, heat and fire. The works in CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON City Gallery Wellington is a contemporary art gallery with a dynamic programme of exhibitions and events, and an international reputation. We’re the hub for art life in New Zealand’s capital. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON We use cookies to help us understand how you use our website, to provide a better experience, and analyse site traffic. To find out more read our privacy policy. Whakamahia ai mātou ngā pihikete ki te rapu māramatanga ki te āhua o tō whakamahi i tēnei pae tukutuku, ki te whakapai hoki i tō whai wāhi mai, me te tātari i ngā manuhiri o te pae tukutuku. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON The Gallery Shop boasts a selection of award-winning art and design books, activities and toys for creative kids, New Zealand made homewares and jewellery plus much more—all carefully selected for the art-and-design-lover who loves to shop. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Brett Graham (Ngāti Koroki Kahukura, Tainui) is known for his large-scale sculptures exploring indigenous histories, politics, and philosophies. His recent show at New Plymouth's Govett-Brewster Art Gallery show has been described as ‘a cautionary tale about human endeavour in Aotearoa New Zealand’. Tai Moana Tai Tangata addressedthe
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Mana Tiriti: The Art of Protest and Partnership. 14 April–17 June 1990. Haeata Hineteiwaiwa te Whare 1990. Open gallery. ARTISTS Juliet Batten, Haeata (Tungia Baker, Ani Crawford, Hinemoa Hilliard, Robyn Kahukiwa, Rona Potiki, Irihapeti Ramsden, Rea Ropiha, Megan Tamati-Quennell), Robert Jahnke, Philip Kelly, Gerda Leenards, RobertPouwhare
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON It’s out of the way: few paths lead there, few people pass through. Hinterland II is the sequel to Sandra Schmidt’s 2006 Hinterland show at Wellington's Mary Newton Gallery. The works in that show explored ideas of pressure and friction, heat and fire. The works in CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON We use cookies to help us understand how you use our website, to provide a better experience, and analyse site traffic. To find out more read our privacy policy. Whakamahia ai mātou ngā pihikete ki te rapu māramatanga ki te āhua o tō whakamahi i tēnei pae tukutuku, ki te whakapai hoki i tō whai wāhi mai, me te tātari i ngā manuhiri o te pae tukutuku. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Ronnie van Hout was born in Christchurch, but now lives in Melbourne. His work explores the freak, the outsider, the reject. His public sculpture Quasi is a partial self-portrait. The giant hybrid face-hand is based on scans of the artist’s own body parts. It’s as if‘the hand of
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON John Drawbridge: Wide Open Interior. Wide Open Interior is the first retrospective of Wellington artist, John Drawbridge. Aged 71, Drawbridge has lived and worked in his Island Bay home for over forty years. The show's title refers to his recurring motif—a window or doorway opening on to the sea. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Oceania: Imagining the Pacific is a collaborative exhibition project staged across Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and City Gallery Wellington. Comprising two complementary shows, it explores the richness of Māori, Pacific, and Pākehā cultures. Oceania: Early Encounters at Te Papa is the historical component. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON 'Hinterland' lies away from sea and river access. It’s out of the way: few paths lead there, few people pass through. Hinterland II is the sequel to Sandra Schmidt’s 2006 Hinterland show at Wellington's Mary Newton Gallery.The works in that show explored ideas of pressure and friction, heat and fire. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON A drug addict is flaked out in the gallery. A little girl puts together a jigsaw puzzle of a map of the US, while her puppy sleeps in its basket. Overweight tourists stare straight ahead, standing stock still. Real People consists of seventeen life-like sculptures by the popular American hyper-realist, Duane Hanson. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON A unique opportunity to play this spectacular artwork and help fill the Gallery with sound. Michael Parekōwhai’s spectacular sculpture He Kōrero Pūrākau mō te Awanui o te Motu: Story of a New Zealand River is a perfectly-tuned Steinway grand piano, and it’s designedto be played.
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Fifty years ago, New Zealand painter Peter McIntyre was on the ground, recording his experience of World War II. McIntyre trains at London's Slade School of Art from 1931 to 1934. A few years later, Britain is at war with Germany. McIntyre volunteers to join the New Zealand Expeditionary Force supporting the British Armies in Cairo. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Emic Etic is a work by Zac Langdon-Pole, a young New Zealand artist based in Berlin. Sometimes it’s hard to judge whether his works are straight or absurd, philosophical or pataphysical—whether they make sense or unmake it. They do foster a certain quality of attention—inquiring and open, sensitive and poetic. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON 23 February–15 June 2008. Reboot: The Jim Barr and Mary Barr Collection, City Gallery Wellington, 2008. Open gallery. ARTISTS Hany Armanious, Stephen Birch, Olaf Breuning, Maurizio Cattelan and Ali Subotnick and Massimiliano Gioni, Rob Cherry, Julian Dashper, Neil Dawson, Simon Denny, Don Driver, Mikala Dwyer, Et Al., WarwickFreeman, Jeffrey
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON City Gallery Wellington is a contemporary art gallery with a dynamic programme of exhibitions and events, and an international reputation. We’re the hub for art life in New Zealand’s capital. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON We use cookies to help us understand how you use our website, to provide a better experience, and analyse site traffic. To find out more read our privacy policy. Whakamahia ai mātou ngā pihikete ki te rapu māramatanga ki te āhua o tō whakamahi i tēnei pae tukutuku, ki te whakapai hoki i tō whai wāhi mai, me te tātari i ngā manuhiri o te pae tukutuku. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON The Gallery Shop boasts a selection of award-winning art and design books, activities and toys for creative kids, New Zealand made homewares and jewellery plus much more—all carefully selected for the art-and-design-lover who loves to shop. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Brett Graham (Ngāti Koroki Kahukura, Tainui) is known for his large-scale sculptures exploring indigenous histories, politics, and philosophies. His recent show at New Plymouth's Govett-Brewster Art Gallery show has been described as ‘a cautionary tale about human endeavour in Aotearoa New Zealand’. Tai Moana Tai Tangata addressedthe
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Mana Tiriti: The Art of Protest and Partnership. 14 April–17 June 1990. Haeata Hineteiwaiwa te Whare 1990. Open gallery. ARTISTS Juliet Batten, Haeata (Tungia Baker, Ani Crawford, Hinemoa Hilliard, Robyn Kahukiwa, Rona Potiki, Irihapeti Ramsden, Rea Ropiha, Megan Tamati-Quennell), Robert Jahnke, Philip Kelly, Gerda Leenards, RobertPouwhare
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON It’s out of the way: few paths lead there, few people pass through. Hinterland II is the sequel to Sandra Schmidt’s 2006 Hinterland show at Wellington's Mary Newton Gallery. The works in that show explored ideas of pressure and friction, heat and fire. The works in CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON City Gallery Wellington is a contemporary art gallery with a dynamic programme of exhibitions and events, and an international reputation. We’re the hub for art life in New Zealand’s capital. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON We use cookies to help us understand how you use our website, to provide a better experience, and analyse site traffic. To find out more read our privacy policy. Whakamahia ai mātou ngā pihikete ki te rapu māramatanga ki te āhua o tō whakamahi i tēnei pae tukutuku, ki te whakapai hoki i tō whai wāhi mai, me te tātari i ngā manuhiri o te pae tukutuku. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON The Gallery Shop boasts a selection of award-winning art and design books, activities and toys for creative kids, New Zealand made homewares and jewellery plus much more—all carefully selected for the art-and-design-lover who loves to shop. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Brett Graham (Ngāti Koroki Kahukura, Tainui) is known for his large-scale sculptures exploring indigenous histories, politics, and philosophies. His recent show at New Plymouth's Govett-Brewster Art Gallery show has been described as ‘a cautionary tale about human endeavour in Aotearoa New Zealand’. Tai Moana Tai Tangata addressedthe
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Mana Tiriti: The Art of Protest and Partnership. 14 April–17 June 1990. Haeata Hineteiwaiwa te Whare 1990. Open gallery. ARTISTS Juliet Batten, Haeata (Tungia Baker, Ani Crawford, Hinemoa Hilliard, Robyn Kahukiwa, Rona Potiki, Irihapeti Ramsden, Rea Ropiha, Megan Tamati-Quennell), Robert Jahnke, Philip Kelly, Gerda Leenards, RobertPouwhare
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON It’s out of the way: few paths lead there, few people pass through. Hinterland II is the sequel to Sandra Schmidt’s 2006 Hinterland show at Wellington's Mary Newton Gallery. The works in that show explored ideas of pressure and friction, heat and fire. The works in CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON We use cookies to help us understand how you use our website, to provide a better experience, and analyse site traffic. To find out more read our privacy policy. Whakamahia ai mātou ngā pihikete ki te rapu māramatanga ki te āhua o tō whakamahi i tēnei pae tukutuku, ki te whakapai hoki i tō whai wāhi mai, me te tātari i ngā manuhiri o te pae tukutuku. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Ronnie van Hout was born in Christchurch, but now lives in Melbourne. His work explores the freak, the outsider, the reject. His public sculpture Quasi is a partial self-portrait. The giant hybrid face-hand is based on scans of the artist’s own body parts. It’s as if‘the hand of
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON John Drawbridge: Wide Open Interior. Wide Open Interior is the first retrospective of Wellington artist, John Drawbridge. Aged 71, Drawbridge has lived and worked in his Island Bay home for over forty years. The show's title refers to his recurring motif—a window or doorway opening on to the sea. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Oceania: Imagining the Pacific is a collaborative exhibition project staged across Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and City Gallery Wellington. Comprising two complementary shows, it explores the richness of Māori, Pacific, and Pākehā cultures. Oceania: Early Encounters at Te Papa is the historical component. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON 'Hinterland' lies away from sea and river access. It’s out of the way: few paths lead there, few people pass through. Hinterland II is the sequel to Sandra Schmidt’s 2006 Hinterland show at Wellington's Mary Newton Gallery.The works in that show explored ideas of pressure and friction, heat and fire. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON A drug addict is flaked out in the gallery. A little girl puts together a jigsaw puzzle of a map of the US, while her puppy sleeps in its basket. Overweight tourists stare straight ahead, standing stock still. Real People consists of seventeen life-like sculptures by the popular American hyper-realist, Duane Hanson. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON A unique opportunity to play this spectacular artwork and help fill the Gallery with sound. Michael Parekōwhai’s spectacular sculpture He Kōrero Pūrākau mō te Awanui o te Motu: Story of a New Zealand River is a perfectly-tuned Steinway grand piano, and it’s designedto be played.
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Fifty years ago, New Zealand painter Peter McIntyre was on the ground, recording his experience of World War II. McIntyre trains at London's Slade School of Art from 1931 to 1934. A few years later, Britain is at war with Germany. McIntyre volunteers to join the New Zealand Expeditionary Force supporting the British Armies in Cairo. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Emic Etic is a work by Zac Langdon-Pole, a young New Zealand artist based in Berlin. Sometimes it’s hard to judge whether his works are straight or absurd, philosophical or pataphysical—whether they make sense or unmake it. They do foster a certain quality of attention—inquiring and open, sensitive and poetic. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON 23 February–15 June 2008. Reboot: The Jim Barr and Mary Barr Collection, City Gallery Wellington, 2008. Open gallery. ARTISTS Hany Armanious, Stephen Birch, Olaf Breuning, Maurizio Cattelan and Ali Subotnick and Massimiliano Gioni, Rob Cherry, Julian Dashper, Neil Dawson, Simon Denny, Don Driver, Mikala Dwyer, Et Al., WarwickFreeman, Jeffrey
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON We use cookies to help us understand how you use our website, to provide a better experience, and analyse site traffic. To find out more read our privacy policy. Whakamahia ai mātou ngā pihikete ki te rapu māramatanga ki te āhua o tō whakamahi i tēnei pae tukutuku, ki te whakapai hoki i tō whai wāhi mai, me te tātari i ngā manuhiri o te pae tukutuku. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Oceania: Imagining the Pacific is a collaborative exhibition project staged across Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and City Gallery Wellington. Comprising two complementary shows, it explores the richness of Māori, Pacific, and Pākehā cultures. Oceania: Early Encounters at Te Papa is the historical component. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Mana Tiriti: The Art of Protest and Partnership. 14 April–17 June 1990. Haeata Hineteiwaiwa te Whare 1990. Open gallery. ARTISTS Juliet Batten, Haeata (Tungia Baker, Ani Crawford, Hinemoa Hilliard, Robyn Kahukiwa, Rona Potiki, Irihapeti Ramsden, Rea Ropiha, Megan Tamati-Quennell), Robert Jahnke, Philip Kelly, Gerda Leenards, RobertPouwhare
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON It’s out of the way: few paths lead there, few people pass through. Hinterland II is the sequel to Sandra Schmidt’s 2006 Hinterland show at Wellington's Mary Newton Gallery. The works in that show explored ideas of pressure and friction, heat and fire. The works in CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Fifty years ago, New Zealand painter Peter McIntyre was on the ground, recording his experience of World War II. McIntyre trains at London's Slade School of Art from 1931 to 1934. A few years later, Britain is at war with Germany. McIntyre volunteers to join the New Zealand Expeditionary Force supporting the British Armies in Cairo. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Resilient bodies. Elisapeta Hinemoa Heta (Ngātiwai, Waikato Tainui) is a kaihoahoa whare (architectural designer). At Jasmax, Auckland, she is a Kaihautū Whaihanga (Māori design leader) and a founding member of Waka Māia, a team specialising in engaging mana whenua and applying Te Aranga Māori design principles. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON A drug addict is flaked out in the gallery. A little girl puts together a jigsaw puzzle of a map of the US, while her puppy sleeps in its basket. Overweight tourists stare straight ahead, standing stock still. Real People consists of seventeen life-like sculptures by the popular American hyper-realist, Duane Hanson. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Moamoa, a Decade is the first survey exhibition of Korean/New Zealand artist Seung Yul Oh. Moamoa is a Korean term meaning ‘gather gather’ or ‘gather together’. The show gathers the diverse facets of Oh’s practice, which is characterised by nervous energy—controlled chaos and cacophony. Nothing is ever allowed to sit still or be quiet. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Not A Dog Show is New Plymouth painter Tom Kreisler's first survey show. The title is a reference to his Dancing Dog paintings, which represent Mexican hairless dogs dancing in different configurations. Kreisler says, 'I thought my paintings haven't gotten a bloody dog show anyway so I thought it was a good working title for theexhibition.’.
HILMA AF KLINT: THE SECRET PAINTINGS Hidden from view for almost sixty years, the work of artist Hilma af Klint is coming to New Zealand for the first time. Discover why these large and exuberantly colourful paintings are delighting crowds and breaking attendance records world-wide, and be among the CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON We use cookies to help us understand how you use our website, to provide a better experience, and analyse site traffic. To find out more read our privacy policy. Whakamahia ai mātou ngā pihikete ki te rapu māramatanga ki te āhua o tō whakamahi i tēnei pae tukutuku, ki te whakapai hoki i tō whai wāhi mai, me te tātari i ngā manuhiri o te pae tukutuku. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Oceania: Imagining the Pacific is a collaborative exhibition project staged across Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and City Gallery Wellington. Comprising two complementary shows, it explores the richness of Māori, Pacific, and Pākehā cultures. Oceania: Early Encounters at Te Papa is the historical component. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Mana Tiriti: The Art of Protest and Partnership. 14 April–17 June 1990. Haeata Hineteiwaiwa te Whare 1990. Open gallery. ARTISTS Juliet Batten, Haeata (Tungia Baker, Ani Crawford, Hinemoa Hilliard, Robyn Kahukiwa, Rona Potiki, Irihapeti Ramsden, Rea Ropiha, Megan Tamati-Quennell), Robert Jahnke, Philip Kelly, Gerda Leenards, RobertPouwhare
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON It’s out of the way: few paths lead there, few people pass through. Hinterland II is the sequel to Sandra Schmidt’s 2006 Hinterland show at Wellington's Mary Newton Gallery. The works in that show explored ideas of pressure and friction, heat and fire. The works in CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Fifty years ago, New Zealand painter Peter McIntyre was on the ground, recording his experience of World War II. McIntyre trains at London's Slade School of Art from 1931 to 1934. A few years later, Britain is at war with Germany. McIntyre volunteers to join the New Zealand Expeditionary Force supporting the British Armies in Cairo. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Resilient bodies. Elisapeta Hinemoa Heta (Ngātiwai, Waikato Tainui) is a kaihoahoa whare (architectural designer). At Jasmax, Auckland, she is a Kaihautū Whaihanga (Māori design leader) and a founding member of Waka Māia, a team specialising in engaging mana whenua and applying Te Aranga Māori design principles. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON A drug addict is flaked out in the gallery. A little girl puts together a jigsaw puzzle of a map of the US, while her puppy sleeps in its basket. Overweight tourists stare straight ahead, standing stock still. Real People consists of seventeen life-like sculptures by the popular American hyper-realist, Duane Hanson. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Moamoa, a Decade is the first survey exhibition of Korean/New Zealand artist Seung Yul Oh. Moamoa is a Korean term meaning ‘gather gather’ or ‘gather together’. The show gathers the diverse facets of Oh’s practice, which is characterised by nervous energy—controlled chaos and cacophony. Nothing is ever allowed to sit still or be quiet. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Not A Dog Show is New Plymouth painter Tom Kreisler's first survey show. The title is a reference to his Dancing Dog paintings, which represent Mexican hairless dogs dancing in different configurations. Kreisler says, 'I thought my paintings haven't gotten a bloody dog show anyway so I thought it was a good working title for theexhibition.’.
HILMA AF KLINT: THE SECRET PAINTINGS Hidden from view for almost sixty years, the work of artist Hilma af Klint is coming to New Zealand for the first time. Discover why these large and exuberantly colourful paintings are delighting crowds and breaking attendance records world-wide, and be among the CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Adam Auditorium. The Adam Auditorium is located on the ground floor of the Gallery, with entry from the main entrance and private entry from Harris Street. This theatre-style auditorium has capacity for 134 seated and two wheelchair spaces. Consider the Auditorium for: Film screenings and product launches CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON The Gallery Shop boasts a selection of award-winning art and design books, activities and toys for creative kids, New Zealand made homewares and jewellery plus much more—all carefully selected for the art-and-design-lover who loves to shop. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON John Drawbridge: Wide Open Interior. Wide Open Interior is the first retrospective of Wellington artist, John Drawbridge. Aged 71, Drawbridge has lived and worked in his Island Bay home for over forty years. The show's title refers to his recurring motif—a window or doorway opening on to the sea. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Ronnie van Hout was born in Christchurch, but now lives in Melbourne. His work explores the freak, the outsider, the reject. His public sculpture Quasi is a partial self-portrait. The giant hybrid face-hand is based on scans of the artist’s own body parts. It’s as if‘the hand of
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Resilient bodies. Elisapeta Hinemoa Heta (Ngātiwai, Waikato Tainui) is a kaihoahoa whare (architectural designer). At Jasmax, Auckland, she is a Kaihautū Whaihanga (Māori design leader) and a founding member of Waka Māia, a team specialising in engaging mana whenua and applying Te Aranga Māori design principles. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON CURATOR Julia Gatley. Wellington architect Ian Athfield reacted against bland modern architecture. He built in a deliberately vernacular style, with features harking back to colonial buildings. His early designs incorporated finials, steeply pitched roofs, timber weatherboards, verandahs, and double-hung windows. HILMA AF KLINT: THE SECRET PAINTINGS Hidden from view for almost sixty years, the work of artist Hilma af Klint is coming to New Zealand for the first time. Discover why these large and exuberantly colourful paintings are delighting crowds and breaking attendance records world-wide, and be among the CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Moamoa, a Decade is the first survey exhibition of Korean/New Zealand artist Seung Yul Oh. Moamoa is a Korean term meaning ‘gather gather’ or ‘gather together’. The show gathers the diverse facets of Oh’s practice, which is characterised by nervous energy—controlled chaos and cacophony. Nothing is ever allowed to sit still or be quiet. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON 23 February–15 June 2008. Reboot: The Jim Barr and Mary Barr Collection, City Gallery Wellington, 2008. Open gallery. ARTISTS Hany Armanious, Stephen Birch, Olaf Breuning, Maurizio Cattelan and Ali Subotnick and Massimiliano Gioni, Rob Cherry, Julian Dashper, Neil Dawson, Simon Denny, Don Driver, Mikala Dwyer, Et Al., WarwickFreeman, Jeffrey
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON We use cookies to help us understand how you use our website, to provide a better experience, and analyse site traffic. To find out more read our privacy policy. Whakamahia ai mātou ngā pihikete ki te rapu māramatanga ki te āhua o tō whakamahi i tēnei pae tukutuku, ki te whakapai hoki i tō whai wāhi mai, me te tātari i ngā manuhiri o te pae tukutuku. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON We use cookies to help us understand how you use our website, to provide a better experience, and analyse site traffic. To find out more read our privacy policy. Whakamahia ai mātou ngā pihikete ki te rapu māramatanga ki te āhua o tō whakamahi i tēnei pae tukutuku, ki te whakapai hoki i tō whai wāhi mai, me te tātari i ngā manuhiri o te pae tukutuku. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Oceania: Imagining the Pacific is a collaborative exhibition project staged across Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and City Gallery Wellington. Comprising two complementary shows, it explores the richness of Māori, Pacific, and Pākehā cultures. Oceania: Early Encounters at Te Papa is the historical component. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Mana Tiriti: The Art of Protest and Partnership. 14 April–17 June 1990. Haeata Hineteiwaiwa te Whare 1990. Open gallery. ARTISTS Juliet Batten, Haeata (Tungia Baker, Ani Crawford, Hinemoa Hilliard, Robyn Kahukiwa, Rona Potiki, Irihapeti Ramsden, Rea Ropiha, Megan Tamati-Quennell), Robert Jahnke, Philip Kelly, Gerda Leenards, RobertPouwhare
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON It’s out of the way: few paths lead there, few people pass through. Hinterland II is the sequel to Sandra Schmidt’s 2006 Hinterland show at Wellington's Mary Newton Gallery. The works in that show explored ideas of pressure and friction, heat and fire. The works in CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Fifty years ago, New Zealand painter Peter McIntyre was on the ground, recording his experience of World War II. McIntyre trains at London's Slade School of Art from 1931 to 1934. A few years later, Britain is at war with Germany. McIntyre volunteers to join the New Zealand Expeditionary Force supporting the British Armies in Cairo. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Resilient bodies. Elisapeta Hinemoa Heta (Ngātiwai, Waikato Tainui) is a kaihoahoa whare (architectural designer). At Jasmax, Auckland, she is a Kaihautū Whaihanga (Māori design leader) and a founding member of Waka Māia, a team specialising in engaging mana whenua and applying Te Aranga Māori design principles. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON A drug addict is flaked out in the gallery. A little girl puts together a jigsaw puzzle of a map of the US, while her puppy sleeps in its basket. Overweight tourists stare straight ahead, standing stock still. Real People consists of seventeen life-like sculptures by the popular American hyper-realist, Duane Hanson. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Moamoa, a Decade is the first survey exhibition of Korean/New Zealand artist Seung Yul Oh. Moamoa is a Korean term meaning ‘gather gather’ or ‘gather together’. The show gathers the diverse facets of Oh’s practice, which is characterised by nervous energy—controlled chaos and cacophony. Nothing is ever allowed to sit still or be quiet. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Not A Dog Show is New Plymouth painter Tom Kreisler's first survey show. The title is a reference to his Dancing Dog paintings, which represent Mexican hairless dogs dancing in different configurations. Kreisler says, 'I thought my paintings haven't gotten a bloody dog show anyway so I thought it was a good working title for theexhibition.’.
HILMA AF KLINT: THE SECRET PAINTINGS Hidden from view for almost sixty years, the work of artist Hilma af Klint is coming to New Zealand for the first time. Discover why these large and exuberantly colourful paintings are delighting crowds and breaking attendance records world-wide, and be among the CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON We use cookies to help us understand how you use our website, to provide a better experience, and analyse site traffic. To find out more read our privacy policy. Whakamahia ai mātou ngā pihikete ki te rapu māramatanga ki te āhua o tō whakamahi i tēnei pae tukutuku, ki te whakapai hoki i tō whai wāhi mai, me te tātari i ngā manuhiri o te pae tukutuku. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Oceania: Imagining the Pacific is a collaborative exhibition project staged across Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and City Gallery Wellington. Comprising two complementary shows, it explores the richness of Māori, Pacific, and Pākehā cultures. Oceania: Early Encounters at Te Papa is the historical component. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Mana Tiriti: The Art of Protest and Partnership. 14 April–17 June 1990. Haeata Hineteiwaiwa te Whare 1990. Open gallery. ARTISTS Juliet Batten, Haeata (Tungia Baker, Ani Crawford, Hinemoa Hilliard, Robyn Kahukiwa, Rona Potiki, Irihapeti Ramsden, Rea Ropiha, Megan Tamati-Quennell), Robert Jahnke, Philip Kelly, Gerda Leenards, RobertPouwhare
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON It’s out of the way: few paths lead there, few people pass through. Hinterland II is the sequel to Sandra Schmidt’s 2006 Hinterland show at Wellington's Mary Newton Gallery. The works in that show explored ideas of pressure and friction, heat and fire. The works in CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Fifty years ago, New Zealand painter Peter McIntyre was on the ground, recording his experience of World War II. McIntyre trains at London's Slade School of Art from 1931 to 1934. A few years later, Britain is at war with Germany. McIntyre volunteers to join the New Zealand Expeditionary Force supporting the British Armies in Cairo. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Resilient bodies. Elisapeta Hinemoa Heta (Ngātiwai, Waikato Tainui) is a kaihoahoa whare (architectural designer). At Jasmax, Auckland, she is a Kaihautū Whaihanga (Māori design leader) and a founding member of Waka Māia, a team specialising in engaging mana whenua and applying Te Aranga Māori design principles. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON A drug addict is flaked out in the gallery. A little girl puts together a jigsaw puzzle of a map of the US, while her puppy sleeps in its basket. Overweight tourists stare straight ahead, standing stock still. Real People consists of seventeen life-like sculptures by the popular American hyper-realist, Duane Hanson. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Moamoa, a Decade is the first survey exhibition of Korean/New Zealand artist Seung Yul Oh. Moamoa is a Korean term meaning ‘gather gather’ or ‘gather together’. The show gathers the diverse facets of Oh’s practice, which is characterised by nervous energy—controlled chaos and cacophony. Nothing is ever allowed to sit still or be quiet. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Not A Dog Show is New Plymouth painter Tom Kreisler's first survey show. The title is a reference to his Dancing Dog paintings, which represent Mexican hairless dogs dancing in different configurations. Kreisler says, 'I thought my paintings haven't gotten a bloody dog show anyway so I thought it was a good working title for theexhibition.’.
HILMA AF KLINT: THE SECRET PAINTINGS Hidden from view for almost sixty years, the work of artist Hilma af Klint is coming to New Zealand for the first time. Discover why these large and exuberantly colourful paintings are delighting crowds and breaking attendance records world-wide, and be among the CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Adam Auditorium. The Adam Auditorium is located on the ground floor of the Gallery, with entry from the main entrance and private entry from Harris Street. This theatre-style auditorium has capacity for 134 seated and two wheelchair spaces. Consider the Auditorium for: Film screenings and product launches CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON The Gallery Shop boasts a selection of award-winning art and design books, activities and toys for creative kids, New Zealand made homewares and jewellery plus much more—all carefully selected for the art-and-design-lover who loves to shop. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON John Drawbridge: Wide Open Interior. Wide Open Interior is the first retrospective of Wellington artist, John Drawbridge. Aged 71, Drawbridge has lived and worked in his Island Bay home for over forty years. The show's title refers to his recurring motif—a window or doorway opening on to the sea. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Ronnie van Hout was born in Christchurch, but now lives in Melbourne. His work explores the freak, the outsider, the reject. His public sculpture Quasi is a partial self-portrait. The giant hybrid face-hand is based on scans of the artist’s own body parts. It’s as if‘the hand of
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Resilient bodies. Elisapeta Hinemoa Heta (Ngātiwai, Waikato Tainui) is a kaihoahoa whare (architectural designer). At Jasmax, Auckland, she is a Kaihautū Whaihanga (Māori design leader) and a founding member of Waka Māia, a team specialising in engaging mana whenua and applying Te Aranga Māori design principles. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON CURATOR Julia Gatley. Wellington architect Ian Athfield reacted against bland modern architecture. He built in a deliberately vernacular style, with features harking back to colonial buildings. His early designs incorporated finials, steeply pitched roofs, timber weatherboards, verandahs, and double-hung windows. HILMA AF KLINT: THE SECRET PAINTINGS Hidden from view for almost sixty years, the work of artist Hilma af Klint is coming to New Zealand for the first time. Discover why these large and exuberantly colourful paintings are delighting crowds and breaking attendance records world-wide, and be among the CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Moamoa, a Decade is the first survey exhibition of Korean/New Zealand artist Seung Yul Oh. Moamoa is a Korean term meaning ‘gather gather’ or ‘gather together’. The show gathers the diverse facets of Oh’s practice, which is characterised by nervous energy—controlled chaos and cacophony. Nothing is ever allowed to sit still or be quiet. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON 23 February–15 June 2008. Reboot: The Jim Barr and Mary Barr Collection, City Gallery Wellington, 2008. Open gallery. ARTISTS Hany Armanious, Stephen Birch, Olaf Breuning, Maurizio Cattelan and Ali Subotnick and Massimiliano Gioni, Rob Cherry, Julian Dashper, Neil Dawson, Simon Denny, Don Driver, Mikala Dwyer, Et Al., WarwickFreeman, Jeffrey
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON We use cookies to help us understand how you use our website, to provide a better experience, and analyse site traffic. To find out more read our privacy policy. Whakamahia ai mātou ngā pihikete ki te rapu māramatanga ki te āhua o tō whakamahi i tēnei pae tukutuku, ki te whakapai hoki i tō whai wāhi mai, me te tātari i ngā manuhiri o te pae tukutuku. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON City Gallery Wellington is a contemporary art gallery with a dynamic programme of exhibitions and events, and an international reputation. We’re the hub for art life in New Zealand’s capital. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON We use cookies to help us understand how you use our website, to provide a better experience, and analyse site traffic. To find out more read our privacy policy. Whakamahia ai mātou ngā pihikete ki te rapu māramatanga ki te āhua o tō whakamahi i tēnei pae tukutuku, ki te whakapai hoki i tō whai wāhi mai, me te tātari i ngā manuhiri o te pae tukutuku. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Oceania: Imagining the Pacific is a collaborative exhibition project staged across Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and City Gallery Wellington. Comprising two complementary shows, it explores the richness of Māori, Pacific, and Pākehā cultures. Oceania: Early Encounters at Te Papa is the historical component. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Mana Tiriti: The Art of Protest and Partnership. 14 April–17 June 1990. Haeata Hineteiwaiwa te Whare 1990. Open gallery. ARTISTS Juliet Batten, Haeata (Tungia Baker, Ani Crawford, Hinemoa Hilliard, Robyn Kahukiwa, Rona Potiki, Irihapeti Ramsden, Rea Ropiha, Megan Tamati-Quennell), Robert Jahnke, Philip Kelly, Gerda Leenards, RobertPouwhare
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON It’s out of the way: few paths lead there, few people pass through. Hinterland II is the sequel to Sandra Schmidt’s 2006 Hinterland show at Wellington's Mary Newton Gallery. The works in that show explored ideas of pressure and friction, heat and fire. The works in CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Fifty years ago, New Zealand painter Peter McIntyre was on the ground, recording his experience of World War II. McIntyre trains at London's Slade School of Art from 1931 to 1934. A few years later, Britain is at war with Germany. McIntyre volunteers to join the New Zealand Expeditionary Force supporting the British Armies in Cairo. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON City Gallery Wellington is a contemporary art gallery with a dynamic programme of exhibitions and events, and an international reputation. We’re the hub for art life in New Zealand’s capital. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON We use cookies to help us understand how you use our website, to provide a better experience, and analyse site traffic. To find out more read our privacy policy. Whakamahia ai mātou ngā pihikete ki te rapu māramatanga ki te āhua o tō whakamahi i tēnei pae tukutuku, ki te whakapai hoki i tō whai wāhi mai, me te tātari i ngā manuhiri o te pae tukutuku. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Oceania: Imagining the Pacific is a collaborative exhibition project staged across Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and City Gallery Wellington. Comprising two complementary shows, it explores the richness of Māori, Pacific, and Pākehā cultures. Oceania: Early Encounters at Te Papa is the historical component. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Mana Tiriti: The Art of Protest and Partnership. 14 April–17 June 1990. Haeata Hineteiwaiwa te Whare 1990. Open gallery. ARTISTS Juliet Batten, Haeata (Tungia Baker, Ani Crawford, Hinemoa Hilliard, Robyn Kahukiwa, Rona Potiki, Irihapeti Ramsden, Rea Ropiha, Megan Tamati-Quennell), Robert Jahnke, Philip Kelly, Gerda Leenards, RobertPouwhare
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON It’s out of the way: few paths lead there, few people pass through. Hinterland II is the sequel to Sandra Schmidt’s 2006 Hinterland show at Wellington's Mary Newton Gallery. The works in that show explored ideas of pressure and friction, heat and fire. The works in CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Fifty years ago, New Zealand painter Peter McIntyre was on the ground, recording his experience of World War II. McIntyre trains at London's Slade School of Art from 1931 to 1934. A few years later, Britain is at war with Germany. McIntyre volunteers to join the New Zealand Expeditionary Force supporting the British Armies in Cairo. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON The Gallery Shop boasts a selection of award-winning art and design books, activities and toys for creative kids, New Zealand made homewares and jewellery plus much more—all carefully selected for the art-and-design-lover who loves to shop. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON John Drawbridge: Wide Open Interior. Wide Open Interior is the first retrospective of Wellington artist, John Drawbridge. Aged 71, Drawbridge has lived and worked in his Island Bay home for over forty years. The show's title refers to his recurring motif—a window or doorway opening on to the sea. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Ronnie van Hout was born in Christchurch, but now lives in Melbourne. His work explores the freak, the outsider, the reject. His public sculpture Quasi is a partial self-portrait. The giant hybrid face-hand is based on scans of the artist’s own body parts. It’s as if‘the hand of
HILMA AF KLINT: THE SECRET PAINTINGS Hidden from view for almost sixty years, the work of artist Hilma af Klint is coming to New Zealand for the first time. Discover why these large and exuberantly colourful paintings are delighting crowds and breaking attendance records world-wide, and be among the CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Resilient bodies. Elisapeta Hinemoa Heta (Ngātiwai, Waikato Tainui) is a kaihoahoa whare (architectural designer). At Jasmax, Auckland, she is a Kaihautū Whaihanga (Māori design leader) and a founding member of Waka Māia, a team specialising in engaging mana whenua and applying Te Aranga Māori design principles. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON CURATOR Julia Gatley. Wellington architect Ian Athfield reacted against bland modern architecture. He built in a deliberately vernacular style, with features harking back to colonial buildings. His early designs incorporated finials, steeply pitched roofs, timber weatherboards, verandahs, and double-hung windows. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Moamoa, a Decade is the first survey exhibition of Korean/New Zealand artist Seung Yul Oh. Moamoa is a Korean term meaning ‘gather gather’ or ‘gather together’. The show gathers the diverse facets of Oh’s practice, which is characterised by nervous energy—controlled chaos and cacophony. Nothing is ever allowed to sit still or be quiet. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON 23 February–15 June 2008. Reboot: The Jim Barr and Mary Barr Collection, City Gallery Wellington, 2008. Open gallery. ARTISTS Hany Armanious, Stephen Birch, Olaf Breuning, Maurizio Cattelan and Ali Subotnick and Massimiliano Gioni, Rob Cherry, Julian Dashper, Neil Dawson, Simon Denny, Don Driver, Mikala Dwyer, Et Al., WarwickFreeman, Jeffrey
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Her titles bear this out: Lying on a Bed like a Swooning Plate (1979), The Artist and the Life of the Cerulian Pot (1984), The Red Jug (1985). Titles also offer a wry take on the art world: Two Faces of a Dealer and The Artist Entertaining the Dealers (both 1985). close. Christina Conrad: A Survey of Works 1970–1987, City GalleryWellington
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON We use cookies to help us understand how you use our website, to provide a better experience, and analyse site traffic. To find out more read our privacy policy. Whakamahia ai mātou ngā pihikete ki te rapu māramatanga ki te āhua o tō whakamahi i tēnei pae tukutuku, ki te whakapai hoki i tō whai wāhi mai, me te tātari i ngā manuhiri o te pae tukutuku. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON City Gallery Wellington is a contemporary art gallery with a dynamic programme of exhibitions and events, and an international reputation. We’re the hub for art life in New Zealand’s capital. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON We use cookies to help us understand how you use our website, to provide a better experience, and analyse site traffic. To find out more read our privacy policy. Whakamahia ai mātou ngā pihikete ki te rapu māramatanga ki te āhua o tō whakamahi i tēnei pae tukutuku, ki te whakapai hoki i tō whai wāhi mai, me te tātari i ngā manuhiri o te pae tukutuku. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Oceania: Imagining the Pacific is a collaborative exhibition project staged across Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and City Gallery Wellington. Comprising two complementary shows, it explores the richness of Māori, Pacific, and Pākehā cultures. Oceania: Early Encounters at Te Papa is the historical component. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON John Drawbridge: Wide Open Interior. Wide Open Interior is the first retrospective of Wellington artist, John Drawbridge. Aged 71, Drawbridge has lived and worked in his Island Bay home for over forty years. The show's title refers to his recurring motif—a window or doorway opening on to the sea. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Fifty years ago, New Zealand painter Peter McIntyre was on the ground, recording his experience of World War II. McIntyre trains at London's Slade School of Art from 1931 to 1934. A few years later, Britain is at war with Germany. McIntyre volunteers to join the New Zealand Expeditionary Force supporting the British Armies in Cairo. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON It’s out of the way: few paths lead there, few people pass through. Hinterland II is the sequel to Sandra Schmidt’s 2006 Hinterland show at Wellington's Mary Newton Gallery. The works in that show explored ideas of pressure and friction, heat and fire. The works in CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Not A Dog Show is New Plymouth painter Tom Kreisler's first survey show. The title is a reference to his Dancing Dog paintings, which represent Mexican hairless dogs dancing in different configurations. Kreisler says, 'I thought my paintings haven't gotten a bloody dog show anyway so I thought it was a good working title for theexhibition.’.
HILMA AF KLINT: THE SECRET PAINTINGS Hidden from view for almost sixty years, the work of artist Hilma af Klint is coming to New Zealand for the first time. Discover why these large and exuberantly colourful paintings are delighting crowds and breaking attendance records world-wide, and be among the CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Mana Tiriti: The Art of Protest and Partnership. 14 April–17 June 1990. Haeata Hineteiwaiwa te Whare 1990. Open gallery. ARTISTS Juliet Batten, Haeata (Tungia Baker, Ani Crawford, Hinemoa Hilliard, Robyn Kahukiwa, Rona Potiki, Irihapeti Ramsden, Rea Ropiha, Megan Tamati-Quennell), Robert Jahnke, Philip Kelly, Gerda Leenards, RobertPouwhare
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON 23 February–15 June 2008. Reboot: The Jim Barr and Mary Barr Collection, City Gallery Wellington, 2008. Open gallery. ARTISTS Hany Armanious, Stephen Birch, Olaf Breuning, Maurizio Cattelan and Ali Subotnick and Massimiliano Gioni, Rob Cherry, Julian Dashper, Neil Dawson, Simon Denny, Don Driver, Mikala Dwyer, Et Al., WarwickFreeman, Jeffrey
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON City Gallery Wellington is a contemporary art gallery with a dynamic programme of exhibitions and events, and an international reputation. We’re the hub for art life in New Zealand’s capital. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON We use cookies to help us understand how you use our website, to provide a better experience, and analyse site traffic. To find out more read our privacy policy. Whakamahia ai mātou ngā pihikete ki te rapu māramatanga ki te āhua o tō whakamahi i tēnei pae tukutuku, ki te whakapai hoki i tō whai wāhi mai, me te tātari i ngā manuhiri o te pae tukutuku. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Oceania: Imagining the Pacific is a collaborative exhibition project staged across Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and City Gallery Wellington. Comprising two complementary shows, it explores the richness of Māori, Pacific, and Pākehā cultures. Oceania: Early Encounters at Te Papa is the historical component. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON John Drawbridge: Wide Open Interior. Wide Open Interior is the first retrospective of Wellington artist, John Drawbridge. Aged 71, Drawbridge has lived and worked in his Island Bay home for over forty years. The show's title refers to his recurring motif—a window or doorway opening on to the sea. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Fifty years ago, New Zealand painter Peter McIntyre was on the ground, recording his experience of World War II. McIntyre trains at London's Slade School of Art from 1931 to 1934. A few years later, Britain is at war with Germany. McIntyre volunteers to join the New Zealand Expeditionary Force supporting the British Armies in Cairo. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON It’s out of the way: few paths lead there, few people pass through. Hinterland II is the sequel to Sandra Schmidt’s 2006 Hinterland show at Wellington's Mary Newton Gallery. The works in that show explored ideas of pressure and friction, heat and fire. The works in CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Not A Dog Show is New Plymouth painter Tom Kreisler's first survey show. The title is a reference to his Dancing Dog paintings, which represent Mexican hairless dogs dancing in different configurations. Kreisler says, 'I thought my paintings haven't gotten a bloody dog show anyway so I thought it was a good working title for theexhibition.’.
HILMA AF KLINT: THE SECRET PAINTINGS Hidden from view for almost sixty years, the work of artist Hilma af Klint is coming to New Zealand for the first time. Discover why these large and exuberantly colourful paintings are delighting crowds and breaking attendance records world-wide, and be among the CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Mana Tiriti: The Art of Protest and Partnership. 14 April–17 June 1990. Haeata Hineteiwaiwa te Whare 1990. Open gallery. ARTISTS Juliet Batten, Haeata (Tungia Baker, Ani Crawford, Hinemoa Hilliard, Robyn Kahukiwa, Rona Potiki, Irihapeti Ramsden, Rea Ropiha, Megan Tamati-Quennell), Robert Jahnke, Philip Kelly, Gerda Leenards, RobertPouwhare
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON 23 February–15 June 2008. Reboot: The Jim Barr and Mary Barr Collection, City Gallery Wellington, 2008. Open gallery. ARTISTS Hany Armanious, Stephen Birch, Olaf Breuning, Maurizio Cattelan and Ali Subotnick and Massimiliano Gioni, Rob Cherry, Julian Dashper, Neil Dawson, Simon Denny, Don Driver, Mikala Dwyer, Et Al., WarwickFreeman, Jeffrey
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON City Gallery Wellington is located in Te Ngākau Civic Square and is open daily, 10am to 5pm. City Gallery is open on public holidays, except Christmas Day. Entry to exhibitions is free. We’re grateful for your donation in the Gallery or online. Some entrances into Te Ngākau Civic Square are closed due to construction work. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON We use cookies to help us understand how you use our website, to provide a better experience, and analyse site traffic. To find out more read our privacy policy. Whakamahia ai mātou ngā pihikete ki te rapu māramatanga ki te āhua o tō whakamahi i tēnei pae tukutuku, ki te whakapai hoki i tō whai wāhi mai, me te tātari i ngā manuhiri o te pae tukutuku. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON The Gallery Shop boasts a selection of award-winning art and design books, activities and toys for creative kids, New Zealand made homewares and jewellery plus much more—all carefully selected for the art-and-design-lover who loves to shop. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Elisabeth Pointon: What Goes Up. 30 November 2019–26 July 2020. Elisabeth Pointon SPECTACULAR. 2019. Photo: Kasmira Krefft. Open gallery. For Plane Text in 2012, Art Basel Miami Beach commissioned ‘fifteen of the most seminal figures in text art’ to create text works to be flown behind aeroplanes. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON John Drawbridge: Wide Open Interior. Wide Open Interior is the first retrospective of Wellington artist, John Drawbridge. Aged 71, Drawbridge has lived and worked in his Island Bay home for over forty years. The show's title refers to his recurring motif—a window or doorway opening on to the sea. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Ronnie van Hout was born in Christchurch, but now lives in Melbourne. His work explores the freak, the outsider, the reject. His public sculpture Quasi is a partial self-portrait. The giant hybrid face-hand is based on scans of the artist’s own body parts. It’s as if‘the hand of
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON 'Hinterland' lies away from sea and river access. It’s out of the way: few paths lead there, few people pass through. Hinterland II is the sequel to Sandra Schmidt’s 2006 Hinterland show at Wellington's Mary Newton Gallery.The works in that show explored ideas of pressure and friction, heat and fire. CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Artist Ella Sutherland discusses her site-specific installation made for current exhibition Every Artist. She is joined in conversation by Sophie Davis, curator and writer. Together they will discuss, Sutherland’s new work Sirens, including her interest in reading, archives, 'looking backwards', and queer histories. In associationwith Every Artist.
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Ngaahina Hohaia. Ngaahina Hohaia was raised at Parihaka, in Taranaki. In the 1860s, the village was a refuge for Māori displaced during the New Zealand Land Wars and engaged in a campaign of non-violent resistance to European occupation of confiscated land. It was closed down through a Government military operation in 1881 and its leadersTe
CITY GALLERY WELLINGTON Resilient bodies. Elisapeta Hinemoa Heta (Ngātiwai, Waikato Tainui) is a kaihoahoa whare (architectural designer). At Jasmax, Auckland, she is a Kaihautū Whaihanga (Māori design leader) and a founding member of Waka Māia, a team specialising in engaging mana whenua and applying Te Aranga Māori design principles.Menu
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