Exhibition listing

Watershed

9 June – 30 November 2024
Chris Corson-Scott, A Poet Writing Before the Falls and Freezing Works, Mataura, 2016, archival pigment print. Ngā Puhipuhi o Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington Art Collection, purchased as part of the University’s 125-year anniversary celebrations

This exhibition is on view at Rutherford House, Victoria University of Wellington

 

Te Pātaka Toi Adam Art Gallery and Te Wāhanga Aronui Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences are proud to present this selection of work from Ngā Puhipuhi o Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington Art Collection, foregrounding contemporary artistic approaches to the environment at Rutherford House on the Pipitea Campus.

Chosen by students in FHSS406 “Topics in the Environmental Humanities”, these works trouble where the human begins and the environment ends; where a body of water emerges and its sources persist; where the past remains vibrant and new horizons appear.

The Environmental Humanities is a developing field that approaches these problems by drawing together perspectives from anthropology, art history, geography, literary studies, media studies, and more. FHSS406 has surveyed key texts to question existing bodies of knowledge, expanding our sense of how humanistic inquiry contributes to understanding the planetary transformations that we are a part of. These multidisciplinary perspectives challenge assumptions about where critical activism begins and recognise the possibilities that ghosts and monsters offer for different futures.

This final project brings together artworks with experimental and speculative writing that prompts critical and creative thinking about what it means to inhabit the planet today, here in Aotearoa.

FHSS406 (2024) is: Abigail Shepherd, Alex Lyth, Amy Holtman, Damon Lendrum, Hasrut Brar, Kaia Costanza-van den Belt, Maddie Brooks Gillespie, Rachael Brenton-Rule, Sophie Orr

With support from:
Adam Grener, English Literatures and Creative Communication
Susan Ballard, Art History
Sophie Thorn, Te Pātaka Toi Adam Art Gallery

Caroline McQuarrie reviews the exhibition at Te Pātaka Toi Adam Art Gallery, 9 April–26 June 2022.
The exhibition runs through 22 January 2023 and explores the possibility of restorative storytelling through revisiting mythologies of nationhood.
A distinctive region, as portrayed by a very influential group.
Ayesha Green’s portraits upend the usual power dynamics between painter and painted, promoting the personal and reclaiming what’s important.
Jae Hoon Lee's impressive new media works present a series of multiple instants where dreams and reality intersect.

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