Exhibition listing

Editions

9 May – 1 June 2024

Artists inculde: Harry Culy, Tyne Gordon, Ayesha Green, Emily Hartley-Skudder, Priscilla Rose Howe, Alan Ibell, Hannah Ireland, Claudia Kogachi, Caroline McQuarrie, Elisabeth Pointon, Kereama Taepa, Christopher Ulutupu, Denys Watkins, Ruby Wilkinson and Erica van Zon

Jhana Millers presents their first exhibition of limited-edition prints, featuring a range of styles, from lithographs and monoprints to screenprints and digital reproductions. The show includes works by most of the gallery artists and an essay by Lachlan Taylor will give context to the show, an extract from which is below:

“The actual experience of enjoying a multiple is something different. In a gallery, in a home, spending time with a print doesn’t initially or immediately trigger the abstraction of its multiplicity for me. They are multiple, but not infinite. Prints belong to a small group, made in a shared moment, bearing the traces of their reproductive medium across serial surfaces. Prints are a family, and when they leave the studio and spread across geographies, they remain a family—each indelibly connected to the moment of their making. They contest the autonomy of the art object while also expanding it.

Some of the artists in this exhibition are well-versed in working with multiples, for others, this is their first time experimenting with seriality. Many showcase the unique capacity offered by reproductions to translate images across media, changing their surface and form.”

Over forty prizes handcrafted by local artists are up for grabs, with all proceeds going toward aid for civilians in Palestine. Entries close 31 October 2024.
HANNAH IRELAND is one of twenty-two artists and collectives featured in Aotearoa Contemporary at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki. We spoke to her about her new works, home and family, and accidentally becoming a ‘glitter girl’.
Opening at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki on Saturday 6 July, the triennial exhibition provides a platform for new art and ideas in Aotearoa New Zealand.
Eight artists have taken home awards, including winner Elliot Collins.
The inaugural event is on now in Kirikiriroa Hamilton and runs through 31 March.
After several presentations at the London gallery, the young, Auckland-based painter joins its stable.
We speak to curator Gregory O'Brien about the exhibition, which runs 25 August 2023–28 February 2024 at New Zealand Maritime Museum Hui Te Ananui a Tangaroa.
Connie Brown reviews the exhibition at Phillida Reid from 22 July–23 September 2023
Christopher Ulutupu presents new short film, The Pleasures of Unbelonging, at the Berwick Film and Media Arts Festival.
The exhibition runs through 22 January 2023 and explores the possibility of restorative storytelling through revisiting mythologies of nationhood.
Ayesha Green’s portraits upend the usual power dynamics between painter and painted, promoting the personal and reclaiming what’s important.
Though Erica van Zon’s tributes to pop culture look distinctly satirical, they are in fact made with great love, tenderness and sincerity. Virginia Were reports.

Recent Exhibitions

26 July – 4 October 2025
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