
Art seen, July 17th
(Moray Gallery)
"Land. Form." at Moray Gallery is an intriguing collaborative exhibition by two (unrelated) artists, ceramicist Sara Scott and painter Joanna Dudson Scott.
The two artists have both been inspired by landscape forms in their works, with a centrepiece of the exhibition being Joanna's large asymmetrical canvas Pudding Hill. This is also the only work to address the landscape in a realistic rather than impressionistic or conceptual way.
From Pudding Hill and from the landscape itself, Sara has produced a series of impressive ceramic vessels, each using a parabola as the basic form, evoking the hills and rivers of the land with horizontal washes of glaze.
The surfaces have been left rough, allowing the glaze to become its own terrain, with pock-marks and rivulets imitating the natural marks on the land.
From these vessels, Joanna has taken one step further removed from the landscape, using Sara's ceramics seen within a surrounding of stones and washes of colour as the subjects of her paintings.
Through reduction and repetition, we are left with an essence of the land that lies beyond its basic topography, while at the same time we are able to grasp the complex relationship between the two media, paint and clay.
"Tide's Return", David Green
(RDS Gallery)
David Green's "Tide's Return" fills and flows from RDS Gallery.
The display, a 30-minute video loop, is viewed from outside.
The art space glows and flows with blue and green waters, their tides moving across the walls, floor, and ceiling.
The perception, of a submerged room, is alienating, disconnecting us from our expectations of a world where land is land and sea is sea.
After dark, the display spills out of the gallery, illuminating Cumberland Street and beyond it, parts of Anzac Square and the Railway Station. It is at this point that the visual disassociation takes on a deeper and more poignant meaning. The station, a jewel in Dunedin's crown, sits on reclaimed land; the site of the RDS gallery is close to the original shoreline.
In this age of the panic over rising sea levels, we are faced with the ghost of Dunedin still to come, one in which our central plain with its grand stately buildings is again submerged beneath the waters.
In this, the dissonance becomes an all-too-real danger.
The installation challenges us to think about life beyond Antarctica's great melt and not just what it will mean to the world in some abstract sense that is too soon disregarded, but what it will mean to us as individuals.
"Fly Fly Away", Jacque Ruston
(Pieces)
Ceramicist Jacque Ruston has her first solo exhibition in several years at Port Chalmers' Pieces, a new combination fashion and art space on Beach Street.
Ruston's art consists of a series of ceramic caricature busts, all done in a semi-naive style vaguely reminiscent of fellow local Jim Cooper.
Clay characters gurn and pout in Ruston's works and their deliberate half-glazed rough-and-readiness gives them life and charm.
Alongside, and sometimes incorporated with, the busts are a series of ceramic chains, these items suggest the human condition, permanently chained to our routines, is unbreakably bound to the rest of humanity.
Ruston's works add an intriguing element with their experimental home-made glazes, often created by the simple expedient of adding bits of broken glass to the surface of her pieces before firing. The artist notes that living within the university's student flatting area means that finding broken bottles is depressingly easy and the different colours of glass add interesting streams and flows to her finished works.
Despite the busts' organic, gently comic nature, there is a keen awareness of art history in many of the pieces — ancient Mediterranean sculptures and Brueghel's grotesques amalgamating and merging into joyfully irreverent finished forms.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Otago Daily Times
06-08-2025
- Otago Daily Times
Art seen: August 6
"Exhale", Mel McKenzie (Gallery De Novo) Bokeh is a widely used style in photography and cinematography. The Japanese term refers to the creation of out-of-focus images to produce an effect of depth or dynamism through the deliberate obscuring of subject matter. What might otherwise be a needle-sharp image is rendered as a soft array of multicoloured light. The use of a bokeh style is rare in painting, but Mel McKenzie uses it to excellent effect, as displayed in her exhibition at Gallery De Novo. In a series of works depicting the streets and gardens of Dunedin, the artist has produced hypnotically ambiguous images which seem to move and shimmer. The effect is startling, though in anything other than small doses might be unnerving or disorienting for some viewers. Many of McKenzie's images depict the city at night, and it is here that the ambiguity of the scenes reaches its zenith. Stripped of the grounding image of a landform or horizon, the city is implied as much as it is illustrated, street and car lights reflecting into streaks on the wet tarmac to dazzling effect. Daytime images of the Botanic Garden and St Clair Esplanade are more instantly recognisable, but the kaleidoscopic displays of Dunedin at night may in the long run be the more effective works. "Discarded Truths and Other Tales", Peter McLaren (Moray Gallery) Peter McLaren displays several strings to his artistic bow at Moray Gallery, with mixed media work, acrylics and monotypes. McLaren's images are predominantly landscapes, and as with Mel McKenzie's paintings, it is the impression of place rather than accurate delineation which lies at the heart of his art. The acrylics are painted with a knowing, wilfully naive touch, trees and houses appearing almost as idealisations of home in the dappled imagery of a dream. Colour and emotion are at the heart of these works rather than a deliberate attempt to portray a reality of place. A similar, almost-realism is at the heart of the still life on display. With McLaren's monotypes, the dials are turned the other way. These are dark, haunted landscapes, similar to early depictions of New Zealand by the country's first European painters. Where the acrylics are airy and warm, these excellent prints depict a land still shrouded in secrets. A fascinating mid-point is achieved in two of the acrylics, Early Evening Light and Coastal Mist , in which the atmosphere of the prints is evoked in painted acrylic form. These pieces nicely capture the land's warm but uneasy welcome, as if to say that we can never be fully aware of the psychology of this place we call home. "A Murder of Jewellers" (Brett McDowell Gallery) For want of a better collective noun, a murder of local jewellers is taking part in an exhibition at Brett McDowell Gallery. The eight artists, ranging from relative newcomers to a distinguished veteran, present works which complement each other well, the broad diversity of styles and materials producing a fine display. The world of flora is a major source of inspiration, with Debbie Adamson's impressive metallic leaf pendants reflected in the forms of Ross Malcolm's forest floor brooches. Malcolm's "pod casts" and "leaf litters" find resonance with Adamson's mild steel lancewood and broadleaf. Jane Dodd's raurenga and lichen-inspired designs sit comfortably alongside these items. Octavia Cook looks at the darker side of nature, with three brooches displaying predator-prey relationships. Craig McIntosh takes the natural world to its basics with three fine pendants of polished and worked basalt. The use of embellished natural stone is also taken up by the "old master" of the group, Kobi Bosshard, with his lovely settings of polished stones within silver surrounds. Brendon Monson focuses more on the man-made, with a series of fine pieces made from recycled timber which use architectural features as their origin. Shelley Norton goes one further, using recycled and reconstituted plastic bags as the material for her brightly-coloured "Tags". By James Dignan


Otago Daily Times
23-07-2025
- Otago Daily Times
Art seen, July 17th
"Land. Form.", Joanna Dudson Scott and Sara Scott (Moray Gallery) "Land. Form." at Moray Gallery is an intriguing collaborative exhibition by two (unrelated) artists, ceramicist Sara Scott and painter Joanna Dudson Scott. The two artists have both been inspired by landscape forms in their works, with a centrepiece of the exhibition being Joanna's large asymmetrical canvas Pudding Hill. This is also the only work to address the landscape in a realistic rather than impressionistic or conceptual way. From Pudding Hill and from the landscape itself, Sara has produced a series of impressive ceramic vessels, each using a parabola as the basic form, evoking the hills and rivers of the land with horizontal washes of glaze. The surfaces have been left rough, allowing the glaze to become its own terrain, with pock-marks and rivulets imitating the natural marks on the land. From these vessels, Joanna has taken one step further removed from the landscape, using Sara's ceramics seen within a surrounding of stones and washes of colour as the subjects of her paintings. Through reduction and repetition, we are left with an essence of the land that lies beyond its basic topography, while at the same time we are able to grasp the complex relationship between the two media, paint and clay. "Tide's Return", David Green (RDS Gallery) David Green's "Tide's Return" fills and flows from RDS Gallery. The display, a 30-minute video loop, is viewed from outside. The art space glows and flows with blue and green waters, their tides moving across the walls, floor, and ceiling. The perception, of a submerged room, is alienating, disconnecting us from our expectations of a world where land is land and sea is sea. After dark, the display spills out of the gallery, illuminating Cumberland Street and beyond it, parts of Anzac Square and the Railway Station. It is at this point that the visual disassociation takes on a deeper and more poignant meaning. The station, a jewel in Dunedin's crown, sits on reclaimed land; the site of the RDS gallery is close to the original shoreline. In this age of the panic over rising sea levels, we are faced with the ghost of Dunedin still to come, one in which our central plain with its grand stately buildings is again submerged beneath the waters. In this, the dissonance becomes an all-too-real danger. The installation challenges us to think about life beyond Antarctica's great melt and not just what it will mean to the world in some abstract sense that is too soon disregarded, but what it will mean to us as individuals. "Fly Fly Away", Jacque Ruston (Pieces) Ceramicist Jacque Ruston has her first solo exhibition in several years at Port Chalmers' Pieces, a new combination fashion and art space on Beach Street. Ruston's art consists of a series of ceramic caricature busts, all done in a semi-naive style vaguely reminiscent of fellow local Jim Cooper. Clay characters gurn and pout in Ruston's works and their deliberate half-glazed rough-and-readiness gives them life and charm. Alongside, and sometimes incorporated with, the busts are a series of ceramic chains, these items suggest the human condition, permanently chained to our routines, is unbreakably bound to the rest of humanity. Ruston's works add an intriguing element with their experimental home-made glazes, often created by the simple expedient of adding bits of broken glass to the surface of her pieces before firing. The artist notes that living within the university's student flatting area means that finding broken bottles is depressingly easy and the different colours of glass add interesting streams and flows to her finished works. Despite the busts' organic, gently comic nature, there is a keen awareness of art history in many of the pieces — ancient Mediterranean sculptures and Brueghel's grotesques amalgamating and merging into joyfully irreverent finished forms.


Scoop
08-05-2025
- Scoop
RNZB Announces Groundbreaking New Season: Home, Land & Sea, 24 July-9 August, 2025
The Royal New Zealand Ballet (RNZB) is proud to announce its most ambitious new season, Home, Land & Sea, featuring a historic first-time collaboration with The New Zealand Dance Company (NZDC). This creative partnership brings together two of New Zealand's premiere dance institutions in a bold exploration of national identity, connection to place and our collective future. At the heart of the season is the world premiere title work Home, Land & Sea, choreographed by acclaimed NZDC artistic director Moss Te Ururangi Patterson (Ngāti Tūwharetoa). This groundbreaking piece will feature six dancers from each company, creating a unique artistic dialogue that transcends traditional dance boundaries. The work, says Patterson, is a poetic response to Aotearoa's complex history, our evolving national identity and the ongoing search for belonging. 'We're not creating a nostalgic version of the past or a tidy vision of the future,' says Patterson. ' Home, Land & Sea is being built as a space for reflection and resistance – a place where the audience can sit with complexity, with connection and with hope. The result will be a deeply human work that moves between the personal and the political, the ancestral and the imagined. Home, Land & Sea will invite audiences to consider what it means to feel at home in this place. It will ask where we have come from, where we are going, and how we might find strength, connection and hope in one another?' The piece is set to an original score by one of New Zealand's most iconic musicians – Shayne P Carter of Straitjacket Fits and Dimmer fame. This collaboration represents a new chapter for ballet in Aotearoa, says Ty King- Wall, RNZB's artistic director. 'Joining the collective forces of our two distinctive companies is all about kotahitanga, about unity and togetherness, which we are so committed to. It is brilliant for RNZB to be building further the creative partnership we've established with Moss over the years, and to be elevating that to another level through this project with NZDC. Both in the studio and on stage, this will be such a wonderful opportunity for learning, sharing, and contemplation.' The programme also features two additional works. Chrysalis, a world premiere by RNZB choreographer-in-residence Shaun James Kelly, explores metamorphosis and personal transformation through the transcendent music of Philip Glass. Kelly, whose own journey from him homeland of Scotland to his artistic home in New Zealand, hopes audiences will see themselves in the work and feel each movement and emotion with the music. 'I feel that this work is relevant right now,' says Kelly. ' Chrysalis is about themes of friendship, connections, relationships and self-discovery – something that we can all relate to. It plays on something that could happen in a moment, in a passing on the street,' says Kelly. 'It's modern in its look but choreographically is based on the beautiful and fluid moments of classical ballet, keeping the tradition alive for generations to come.' That modern look comes from the stunning costumes created by leading fashion designer Rory William Docherty. "It has been a dream working with Rory,' says Kelly. "After collaborating on the concept, he has used his original artwork and unique take on traditional design to bring movement and life to the clothing.' The third piece on the bill is The Way Alone by master choreographer Stephen Baynes. The Way Alone premiered in New Zealand as part of Tutus on Tour. For Baynes, this is a deeply personal response to the music of Tchaikovsky which has been described as 'contemplative, thoughtful and inherently musical' and one he hopes will raise awareness of some of the composer's lesser-known work. 'The ballet is fundamentally an expression of Tchaikovsky's music and especially the Romanticism which is at the heart of his aesthetic,' says Baynes. 'This season embodies all that we value at RNZB – artistic risk-taking, cultural connection and dance that really speaks to the contemporary New Zealand experience,' says King-Wall. 'We're creating a space where the work that we do pushes our boundaries, opens our minds, and defies expectations on what ballet is and what it can be.'