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A Feast For The Senses
A Feast For The Senses
City Gallery Wellington announces its Festival Season
City Gallery Wellington launches its Festival Season with three exhibitions to excite the senses. Sound,
colour and form are all celebrated in the work of three leading artists during the free Festival Season,
which runs February 20 to 16 May 2010.
New Zealand's first opportunity to experience a world-renowned sound installation artist, Wellington's
chance to see a large-scale survey on one of our foremost figurative painters, and a major showing one of
New Zealand's most revered abstractionistsare City Gallery Wellington's contribution to the New Zealand
International Arts Festival 2010.
Gallery Director Paula Savage is thrilled to be able to offer such a variety of experiences to Gallery visitors:
"Yayoi Kusama'sMirrored Years has engaged a remarkably wide audience, from traditional gallery
visitors to those who have never been inside a gallery before. Our Festival Season exhibitions
provide such a mix of artforms -from music to intense colour to delicate form and line -that we
are sure people will love this season just as much. We are also delighted that this season will be
free entry, ensuring many repeat visits to experience all three exhibitions. "
The Forty-Part Motet (2001) by Canadian artist Janet Cardiff is an immersive sculpturally-conceived sound
piece, in which forty separately-recorded voices are played back through forty speakers. This evocative
installation uses recordings of the Salisbury Cathedral choir singing Spem in Alium Nunquam Habui (1573)
by Thomas Tallis, one of England'smost influential Renaissance composers.
Séraphine Pick's original and imaginative paintings have made her one of New Zealand's most highly
regarded painters. From the spectral dresses, leaky baths and teetering suitcases of the 1990s to the
psychologically-charged dreamscapes of more recent years, this large-scale survey, curated by Felicity
Milburn of Christchurch Art Gallery, will bring together over seventy works made between 1994 and 2009
by this Wellington-based artist.
"You want a landscape? Take a drive in the country."Milan Mrkusich's blunt piece of advice to Woman's
Weekly readers in 1969 was made in the face of intense hostility towards abstract art. Forty years later,
the exhibition Trans-form brings Mrkusich's now highly revered abstract painting to City Gallery Wellington.
Curated by Alan Wright and Ed Hanfling, this exhibition provides a unique opportunity to witness Mrkusich's
potent use of symbolic form, line and colour over four decades of painting.
A strong programme of public events will support the exhibitions, providing visitors with a deeper
understanding of the works on show.
Séraphine Pick: Tell Me More is a Christchurch Art Gallery Te Puna o Waiwhetu touring exhibition. Touring
sponsor Ernst & Young.
Trans-form: The Abstract Art of Milan Mrkusich is a Gus Fisher Gallery exhibition, in partnership with City
Gallery Wellington.
The Festival Season:
Janet Cardiff, Milan Mrkusich, Seraphine Pick
20 February -16 May 2010
Free Entry
City Gallery Wellington
Civic Square, Wellington
Ph: 04 801 3021, citygallery@wmt.org.nz www.citygallery.org.nz
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Artists Alliance cartoon by Nigel Brown |