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Art seen: August 6

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
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Only one player can pick up the 'Jugg' and score. Meanwhile, most players carry weapons to whack each other with, and each round is timed to 100 beats of a tribal drum. The drummer is positioned next to the referee but sometimes, if numbers are short, the referee also drums. When a player is tagged/hit they need to stand still for five slow drum beats (with two-second intervals between beats) before they can move again. Connor Franklin (front right) attacks during a jugger match in Auckland's Albert Park. Photo /Dean Purcell Much like J.K. Rowling's Quidditch, jugger was invented in a fictional world; in this case, a 1989 post-apocalyptic Mad Max rip-off called Salute of the Jugger in which desert warriors brutally compete to score goals with a dog skull. The forgettable film had, at best, a small cult following until a pair of eccentric Germans started playing the game for real in 1993, leading to the first European tournament in 1995. 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Photo / Dean Purcell Franklin, 19, says AUT Jugger Club Inc is slightly behind in terms of international-quality skill but thriving in terms of popularity. Thanks to Auckland's huge population, even the small fraction of Albert Park passers-by who like the look of being whacked with modified pool noodles means dozens of new players have joined up. Franklin set about sourcing a load of pompfen (weapons) including swords, staffs, shields and a six-metre ball and chain, all of which are made from foam, yoga mats, plastic pipe and held together by PVC tape. That padding means players can hit 'pretty hard' without injuring anyone, he says. He tracked down prospective players through online chat rooms, stalls and promotions around the university. 'We also reached out to the board game club, your nerdier types, and the club just started exploding from word of mouth. We have 80 in the chat and 25 people show up for each game.' Jugger players can take the sport very seriously, so while make-your-own-weapons workshops are popular, Franklin made sure to ship his team's 'professional grade' chains from Germany for $380 for two. Jugger organiser Connor Franklin imported two weapons from Germany but most players make their own. Photo / Dean Purcell Franklin concedes it's almost impossible to walk past a game of jugger without stopping to ask, 'What the hell is this?' 'Initially people think, 'What the heck is going on on the field?' It's quite an alien sport. There's nothing else like it. You have to give it a go and you either love it or decide 'It's not for me'. A lot of people get into it really quick, go home, research it, get caught up with the rules, build their own pompfen then come back next week and tell me what to do!' Happy to play in mud through the winter, the AUT club will experiment this year with playing indoors and has opened its doors to 16-year-olds (accompanied by a guardian). Players don't need to be AUT students to join. The nerdy sport certainly comes with its own lingo. The runner is called a qwik, and the ball is called a jugg. Franklin makes sure to keep it all welcoming. 'My colleagues gauge the level of interest and nerdiness and adapt the terminology from there,' he says. 'When I explain it's like rippa rugby, people get their head around it.' Jugger can be a family affair Jugger is often a family affair, with Whangārei's gatherings featuring whānau battling it out. Lynnell Greer got involved as an organiser and referee after her young kids joined, in 2014, alongside dad and co-founder Adam Goddard. Lynnell Greer, of Whangārei, playing the combat sport of jugger at Kensington Park in Whangārei. Photo / Michael Botur A typical Sunday gathering in Whangārei's Kensington Park has Greer packing in and packing out weapons, refereeing and beating the drum. Greer has helped Whangārei take on two Australian tournaments and hosted the visit of Australia's Drop Bears. She's seen plenty of families stop, stare and join in over the past decade, and turnout continues to be good. After all, what child doesn't love whacking their parents with a pool noodle? 'I tell interested people, 'You look like you need a weapon in your hand!' Children are always keen to have a go against their parents,' Greer says. Matthew Taylor Moore, aged 11, from Whangārei, dives for the ring during a game of jugger at Kensington Park, Whangārei. Photo / Michael Botur Her advice for hesitant newbies? 'Just give it a go. You can do it at your pace. It's about skill, not speed, and if you're smart you can outwit the athletic.' Cooper Cordyne recovers after a jugger match in Auckland's Albert Park. Photo / Dean Purcell Jugger jargon Qwik: the runner, who can score in the enemy's goal Enforcer: a player with a weapon Mal or mound: the enemy's goal (a rubber tyre) Pompfen: weaponry (plural) 100 Stones: 100 beats of the drum (the duration of each third ) – a full game is 300 beats Jugg: the ball, made of foam, representing a dog skull Invasion: an exchange or visit, such as when Aucklanders 'invade' to battle Whangārei Mercenary: a lone warrior looking to join a team Sign up to The Daily H, a free newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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