Art New Zealand

Power & Politics

Ruth Buchanan The scene in which I find myself / Or, where does my body belong Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, New Plymouth 7 December 2019–29 March

The exhibition The scene in which I find myself / Or, where does my body belong marked the 50th anniversary of the Govett-Brewster Art Gallery. Commissioned by recently arrived directors Aileen Burns and Johan Lundh, Berlin-based artist Ruth Buchanan (Te Atiawa, Taranaki) used the opportunity to build on her previous solo exhibition at the gallery, The actual and its document (10 September–4 December 2016), delving more deeply into the institution’s collecting history of the past 50 years. Buchanan selected a massive 273 works from the Govett-Brewster collection, grouping them into the decades in which they were bought and installing each of these across the five exhibition spaces. To choose her selection, she generated a simple set of rules: for each decade since the gallery opened in 1970, the first work purchased from an artist was included, unless practical considerations, such as large installations or videos requiring a dark space, prevented this.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Art New Zealand

Art New Zealand5 min read
Revealing Correspondence
Dear Colin, Dear Ron: The Selected Letters of Colin McCahon and Ron O’Reilly by Peter Simpson Te Papa Press, Wellington 2024 MICHAEL DUNN Nobody has written more extensively on Colin McCahon in recent years than Peter Simpson. His landmark two-volume
Art New Zealand5 min read
A Commission in the North Chris Booth’s Te Haa o Te Ao
Chris Booth is obviously exhausted after the completion in December of his latest work, Te Haa o Te Ao (The Breath of the World). This kinetic sculpture, sitting on land at the entrance to Kerikeri township, comprises 120 boulders suspended from a 15
Art New Zealand4 min read
Pacific Fair Sylvia Marsters at the Aotearoa Art Fair
From the 2002 Pasifika Festival at Western Springs in Auckland, I have an enduring memory. Sylvia Marsters, on a sweltering afternoon standing at her easel, is perched on a small rise, painting detailed delicate frangipani on a small canvas. They wer

Related Books & Audiobooks