Back in Black; Contemporary New Zealand art.

Exhibition date:
10 September 2011 to 28 March 2012
Location: 
30 The Octagon, Dunedin
Venue: 
Dunedin Public Art Gallery 
City: 
Dunedin

Back in Black showcases a collection of works by some of New Zealand’s most recognised and notable artists from the late twentieth century to the present. From Ralph Hotere to Lisa Reihana, Stephen Bambury to Shane Cotton, and Len Lye to Tom Kreisler, there is distinct interest in the ways that blackness can resist, effect and conjure-up a range of unique perceptual and emotive qualities. As Ad Reinhardt mused so eloquently about this subject “… black as a symbol, black as a color, and the connotations of black in our culture where our whole system is imposed on us in terms of darkness, lightness, blackness, whiteness. Goodness and badness are associated with black. As an artist and painter I would eliminate the symbolic pretty much, for black is interesting not as a color but as a non-color and as the absence of color”.

The conceptual starting point for this project is Colin McCahon’s iconic Fourteen Stations of the Cross, which provides a visual, historical and spiritual anchor to the exhibition. It is a painting to be traversed, to be walked past back and forth a sum of many parts. Positioned in this context, the works of Julian Dashper, Gavin Hipkins and Mary-Louise Browne become interesting bedfellows. They visually pop, repeat and even create another pathway between the worlds of black and white. 

 

Text extracted from the Dunedin Public Art Gallery website.