Exhibition listing

Archive: alter / image

23 September 2023 – 21 January 2024

“New questions have been asked by feminism of representations: who speaks, for whom, from what position and with what authority in the production of discourses …” Elizabeth Grosz

In 1993, the centennial year of women’s suffrage in Aotearoa, City Gallery Wellington re-opened in its current home, the former Wellington Public Library Building. To mark the centennial year, the gallery mounted alter / image: feminism and representation in New Zealand art 1973-1993, curated by Christina Barton and Deborah Lawler-Dormer. alter / image opened alongside Jacqueline Fraser’s He Tohu: The New Zealand RoomRosemarie Trockel, a solo show by the German artist, and Te Whare Puanga: Recent Māori and Pacific Island Women’s Weaving and Tivaevae from the Wellington Region. In combination, this suite of four exhibitions saw the entire gallery building filled solely with the work of women artists.

Thirty years later, Archive: alter / image re-visits and re-configures this critical terrain. Taking Elizabeth Grosz’ question as a point of enquiry, it prompts viewers to consider how discourse around feminism and artmaking has shifted and morphed in the intervening years. Archive: alter / image presents archival documentation and ephemera from across the exhibition, as well as the accompanying film and performance programmes. This material is presented in conversation with artworks by Rhondda Bosworth, Mary-Louise Browne, Alexis Hunter, Robyn Kahukiwa (Ngāti Porou, Te Aitanga-a-Hauiti), Merata Mita (Te Arawa, Ngāti Pikiao), Jude Rae, Lisa Reihana (Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Hine, Ngāti Tū), Rachel Shearer (Rongowhakaata, Te Aitanga a Māhaki, Pākehā) and Christine Webster. Made between 1973 and 2019, these artworks prompt us, in a range of ways, to consider who speaks for whom, what stories we are told, and who holds the power of representation.

Sally Dan-Cuthbert answers our questions ahead of her eponymous gallery's debut at the 2025 Aotearoa Art Fair, presenting works by Sabine Marcelis, Lisa Reihana and Edward Waring.
The major public art experience transforms Tāmaki Makaurau's waterfront, 16 April – 16 May 2025.
The six-metre-tall video installation draws inspiration from the carvings in the nearby whare whakairo of Waipapa Marae, Tāne-nui-a-rangi, and is publicly visible from Symonds Street.
Rosanna Raymond recalls the Interdigitate Festival of 1995 and the early currents of acti.VĀ.ted artistic practices in Aotearoa.
The installation will visualise data, sounds and images from Haupapa Glacier, Aoraki Mt Cook, and will be live-streamed to KHŌJ in New Delhi.
New Zealand Portrait Gallery Te Pūkenga Whakaata is calling on the public to help them locate six works by the senior artist that remain unlocated ahead of a survey exhibition, set to open in August 2024.
The festival runs 5–28 January 2024 and will include an installation by Lisa Reihana and performance by Luther Cora and the Yugambeh Aboriginal Dancers.
Cameron Ah Loo-Matamua on the indigenous gaze of Robyn Kahukiwa.
Zoe Black talks to Lisa Reihana about her new commissions for the Aotearoa Festival of the Arts and the opening of Sydney Modern at the Art Gallery of New South Wales.
“Robyn Kahukiwa’s mahi toi is direct and bold, her paintings simultaneously embrace the warmth and richness of Te Ao Māori, of our values, spirituality, and practices whilst also depicting the fraught social realities for many Māori living in colonised Aotearoa,” writes George Watson

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25 June – 20 July 2025
13 June – 25 July 2025
3 May – 27 July 2025
8 June – 24 August 2025
14 June – 11 October 2025
18 – 28 June 2025
12 April – 26 July 2025
14 June – 11 October 2025
Saturday 21 June, 10 – 4pm Monday 23 – Tuesday 24 June, 10 – 5pm
14 June – 12 July 2025
19 June – 12 July 2025