Art & Entertainment | Book Reviews | Education | Entertainment Video | Health | Lifestyle | Sport | Sport Video | Search

 


Sriwhana Spong: The Purple Blotter

Sriwhana Spong
The Purple Blotter
1-31 March 2012
Preview Wednesday 29 February 6-8pm

Michael Lett is pleased to present The Purple Blotter, an exhibition of new work by Sriwhana Spong. The exhibition is a ‘choreography’ of film, sculpture and collage that explores notions of public and private, the intuitive and the cerebral, and the body that is the borderland in movement between these different states.

The purple blotter referred to in Spong’s title is that of pivotal consequence in Colette’s 1934 novella Duo, in which the simple observation of a patch of light reflected on a cheek by a purple leather blotter becomes the catalyst for a crisis that changes the lives of both her characters.

Duo is a portrait not just of two people, but of two figures inseparable from the space they inhabit – the shifting light and the objects that surround them: orchids in a vase, a blanket with cigarette burns, and love letters hidden inside a purple blotter. This is a story of fleeting moments as inspiration for change, and the inseverable relationship between bodies and their environments. Mostly however, it is about two people watching something disappear.

Spong’s major new film titled Beach Study is her first made using 16mm. In addition to the idiosyncrasies of the film stock, the use of coloured filters bring intense flashes of magenta, violet and amber that flicker and morph with the landscape they celebrate. A body responds in the form of dance, with gestures both classical and familiar, intentionally designed to escape any particular philosophy of movement.

In this work Spong makes a personal observation of disappearance – that of a once loved childhood beach to which access is now made difficult by private land ownership. Fleeting moments and corporeal recollections here form an exploration of the precarious relationship between memory and experience.

In a series of sculptures and collages Spong explores her ongoing interest in Balinese offerings, an interest spurred by the physicality of such objects - their amorphous formal quality, fragility, and use of everyday objects. In these works Spong employs a diversity of materials such as magazines, recycled packaging, silver, and thread dyed in wine.

Sriwhana Spong was born in 1979 in Auckland, New Zealand. Recent exhibitions include Raiding the Archives, Bangkok Experimental Film Festival, Thai Film Archive, Bangkok, 2012; Collecting Contemporary, Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Wellington, 2011; Fanta Silver and Song, Gertrude Contemporary, Melbourne, 2011; Scene Shifts, Bonniers Konsthall, Stockholm, 2010; Lethe-wards, Art Statements, Basel, 2010.

Forthcoming exhibitions include Actions and Remains, the second Auckland Art Gallery sculpture terrace commission, opening April 2012.


ENDS

 
 
 
 
 
Culture Headlines | Health Headlines | Education Headlines

 

Spotify: All You Can Eat Music?

Online music streaming is set to take off with the entry of Spotify into the New Zealand market and its partnership with wireless music manufacturer Sonos. More >>


Sister Citys: Auckland Street Art Hits Los Angeles

Multi-disciplinary Auckland artist Askew One has been honoured under the Los Angles Sister Cities programme for his generosity and stewardship as a mentor in contemporary public art. More>>

Werewolf: Three Films About Madness

Phillip Matthews: Sometimes it can seem that madness is the shared New Zealand story – shared but also secret. More>>

ALSO:

Super City: Network Asks For US Version Of Kiwi Comedy

ABC in the US has picked up Super City, a comedy presentation, which will be produced by ABC Studios. Super City is an adaptation of the TV3 comedy series of the same name created by and starring Madeleine Sami and directed by Taika Waititi. More>>

ALSO:

Preparedness: Social Media To Help Get 1 Million Do Earthquake Drill

Today, with the launch of its Facebook page and Twitter account, New Zealand ShakeOut took another step towards having 1 million people do an earthquake drill. It is exactly five months before 9:26am, 26 September (9:26-26:9) when the campaign will culminate with a nation-wide earthquake drill – Drop, Cover and Hold! More>>

Anzac Day: "A Personal Account Of War"

On Wednesday New Zealand stops to mark Anzac Day, and remember those who’ve fought for New Zealand. Te Ara is marking the day with a series of new entries and a first – a video story documenting the tragic experience of a New Zealand soldier, George Bollinger. More>>

ALSO:

LATEST HEADLINES

 
 
 
Culture
Search Scoop  
 
 
powered by newsagent
NZ independent news