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NZ’s Biennale Arte 2019 in Venice exhibition to launch 8 May

CREATIVE NEW ZEALAND MEDIA RELEASE

New Zealand’s exhibition for Biennale Arte 2019 in Venice to be launched 8 May

Two years in the making, with a list of millions of disappeared or lost entities, artist Dane Mitchell’s ambitious project for the New Zealand pavilion at the 58th International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia, Post hoc, is ground breaking and innovative in both the scale of its content and in its unique, expansive footprint.

New Zealand’s moa, laughing owl, Te Wairoa, discontinued newspapers, giant Haast’s eagle and the full paleontological record of Aotearoa are included in a list of disappeared, extinct or lost things that will be broadcast to an audience across Venice at a rate of over 10,000 per day, for eight hours every day, over the seven months of the exhibition.

Post hoc will provide a relevant and timely intersection with topical global concerns such as climate and environmental change, and the impacts of technological change.

“This is the biggest, most ambitious work I have ever produced and I feel like I have been swimming, and sometimes sinking, in a churning ocean of information over the past two years,” said Dane.

“I think this is the first time that a work of art will attempt to demonstrate the momentous scale of what has disappeared, or is disappearing, from our world and it’s appropriate that it’s being shown in the ‘sinking’ city of Venice.”

The New Zealand pavilion, to be located at the Palazzina Canonica facing Riva dei Sette Martiri, will act as the repository and base for an automated broadcast of the vast lists of things which have disappeared, become extinct, obsolete or been destroyed, with industrially produced cell tree towers (designed to attempt camouflage as trees) acting as the transmitters of information.

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The ‘voice’ will be broadcast from the New Zealand pavilion to the ‘trees’ that will ‘whisper’ each item in sync with the broadcast in different locations around Venice. This will create a digital umbrella of information across the city facilitating a unique and expansive exhibition footprint that will reach Venetians and visitors beyond the exhibition’s borders. Simultaneously, any one list can be selected and streamed on a handheld device when within the field of transmission encircling each tree-transmitter.

Coinciding with the audible component, the lists will find tangible form by being printed on rolls of paper in sync with the transmissions and slowly filling the Palazzina’s empty library.

New Zealand artists have a reputation for presenting innovative work at Venice and 2019 will be no different. Post hoc represents the symbolic, temporary revival of millions of lost things. By being spoken and included in the printed out lists, these millions of lost things are revived, remembered and maybe, mourned.

Post hoc uses the act of speech to momentarily call up this staggering accretion of loss that sits underneath this present moment in time,” said Dane.

“Listeners at the tree towers will be able to hear, or tune into, over 10,000 entities named each day, encompassing an encyclopaedic range of subject matter, from lists of known black holes, disappeared sounds and extinct birds to former national anthems.”

The Palazzina Canonica is the former headquarters of exhibition partner Istituto di Scienze Marine (CNR-ISMAR), a scientific research institution which is part of the Italian National Research Council operating in the field of marine sciences. It will be the first time the institute has partnered with a national pavilion at the Biennale Exhibitions. Its focus on the marine world – including the risks it currently faces – forms the basis for a shared interest.

The 58th International Art Exhibition will open to the public from May 11th to November 24th, 2019.

NOTES TO EDITORS:

About New Zealand at the International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia

New Zealand has exhibited at the International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia since 2001. Creative New Zealand funds and manages New Zealand’s presence at the International Art Exhibitions, with support from patrons, partners and sponsors. Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa is a key partner. For further information visit to www.nzatvenice.com or www.labiennale.org

About the Artist: Dane Mitchell (Aotearoa New Zealand)

Dane Mitchell’s practice is concerned with physical reality in its intersection with the intangible and visible manifestations of other dimensions. His work teases out the potential for objects and ideas to be present, evoking a connection between the sensual and the conscious. Mitchell’s practice speculates on our understanding of the material world and explores experiences of systems of knowledge or belief. Mitchell has held 30 solo exhibitions and participated in more than 50 group exhibitions. He has presented solo exhibitions in institutions in New Zealand, France, Germany, Brazil, The Netherlands, Switzerland, Hong Kong, Australia and the United States. He has also participated in a number of biennales, including Biennale of Sydney 2016; Gwangju Biennale 2012; Liverpool Biennial 2012; Singapore Biennale 2011; Ljubljana Biennale 2011; Busan Biennale 2010 and the Tarrawara Biennial 2008.

About the Curators:

Lead Curator: Dr Zara Stanhope (NZ/Australia)

Zara Stanhope has 20 years’ curatorial experience in lead roles in art institutions in New Zealand and Australia. She is the Curatorial Manager, Asian and Pacific Art at Australia’s Queensland Art Gallery|Gallery of Modern Art (QAGOMA). Her curatorial practice spans over 70 curated and co- curated exhibitions and she is widely published in books and catalogues.

Co-Curator: Chris Sharp (United States/Mexico)

Chris Sharp is a writer and independent curator based in Mexico City, where he co- runs the project space Lulu. He has curated a multitude of international exhibitions and contributed essays to many catalogues. Formerly news editor at Flash Art International and editor-at-large of Kaleidoscope, he is a contributing editor of Art Review and of Art-Agenda.

About the Istituto di Scienze Marine (Institute of Marine Science):

The Istituto di Scienze Marine del Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR-ISMAR) is a research institution. It conducts research in the field of marine sciences across polar, oceanic, and Mediterranean regions. The institute is part of the Italian National Research Council (CNR), a public organisation committed to carry out, promote, spread, transfer, and improve research activities in knowledge growth for the scientific, technological, economic, and social development of the country. It will be the first time the institute has partnered with a National Pavilion at the International Exhibitions of La Biennale di Venezia. Its focus on the marine world – including the risks it currently faces – forms the basis for a shared interest.

For further information, go to www.nzatvenice.com or www.labiennale.org

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