Latest news with #AotearoaArtFair


NZ Herald
04-05-2025
- Entertainment
- NZ Herald
Sarjeant happenings: Nicki Manthel strengthens art donor community
'Arts philanthropists like to have the opportunity to make a difference and also to feel they belong to something greater than themselves, to feel deeply connected to the gallery,' Manthel said. 'Now I've come to the Sarjeant Gallery where there's this wonderful, generous community of givers who gave to restore and strengthen the heritage building and build the extension; Te Pātaka o Tā Te Atawhai Archie John Taiaroa. 'So now I'm trying to build and expand on that sense of community amongst them.' An endowment fund has been created from private donations and is managed by Te Whare O Rehua Sarjeant Gallery Trust whose primary focus until now has been raising funds for the redevelopment project. With the completion of the redevelopment, the trust is turning its attention to supporting the work that goes on inside the building, and creating a legacy for future generations. 'The Sarjeant Gallery Endowment Fund works hard to support the core work of the gallery, building the collection and ensuring its conservation,' Manthel said. 'The fund would also support an international or touring exhibition, that could mean saying 'yes' to a bold curatorial decision. 'Those are the things that bring audiences from around New Zealand and overseas to Whanganui and to the gallery. 'It is also part of a strategy to encourage people to return to the gallery.' The gallery refreshes exhibitions every three months or so. The new wing, Te Pātaka o Tā Te Atawhai Archie John Taiaroa, considerably extends the exhibition space. Manthel said the interest, involvement and financial support from Whanganui businesses was crucial for the gallery opening and also demonstrated the community's buy-in. As part of her job raising sponsorship, Manthel is seeking a new sponsor for the currently named Pattillo Whanganui Arts Review. Pattillo has generously provided five years of sponsorship to New Zealand's longest-running open-call, regional art exhibition and competition. 'It means that artists are supported and the review also has a really high profile. There are hundreds of entries and massive visitation.' The major sponsor generously provides the substantial first prize. This year a new prize, the People's Choice Award, will be added. Manthel also organises events so that donors and supporters of the gallery feel engaged and informed. She has recently organised a trip for a group of the Sarjeant's supporters to visit the Aotearoa Art Fair, some private collections and artist studios in Auckland. She provides opportunities for supporters to learn about the behind-the-scenes complexities of maintaining and growing an art collection of national importance, to meet curators and artists, preview exhibitions, be an exhibition partner or align their business brand with the Sarjeant Gallery. Equipped with this knowledge, donors and supporters can advocate for the gallery both nationally and internationally. 'This means that people are out there in the community talking about the gallery, promoting it, backing it as well as contributing financially,' she said. Manthel said people's wellbeing and enrichment of community life underpin her work and that of the gallery. 'That's terribly important and usually an unquantifiable thing, except that 74,000 visitors have had their lives enriched in the last five months by coming to the Sarjeant.'


National Business Review
30-04-2025
- Entertainment
- National Business Review
Why Māori art is firmly in the frame
The Aotearoa Art Fair opens today in Auckland amid a surge of national and international attention for Māori artists – a movement reshaping both New Zealand's creative economy and its global cultural brand. Over four days, collectors, curators, and art lovers will gather at the Viaduct Events


Newsroom
30-04-2025
- Business
- Newsroom
Female artists and new buyers breathe life into the art market
Amid broader economic uncertainty, the global art market contracted in 2024, recording an estimated $57.5 billion in sales – a 12 percent decline in total value from its 2022 peak. The findings, published last month in the Art Basel and UBS Art Market Report 2025 reflect the cooling of a market no longer insulated from financial headwinds. Yet the latest data, compiled by cultural economist Dr Clare McAndrew, also reveals a more nuanced picture. While overall sales declined, the number of transactions grew by 3 percent over the previous year. Amid shrinking high-value sales, the rising number of transactions are attributed in part to 'a broadening of the collector base', McAndrew noted, pointing to increased engagement with more affordable works as entry points for first-time collectors. Notably, the report highlights a surge in interest in female artists, with galleries worldwide raising the proportion of women in their rosters to 41 percent. It also underscores the enduring value of in-person interactions: having recovered after Covid, art fairs remain the most common point of entry for new buyers to discover works that move them. Aotearoa Art Fair, the country's premier art fair opens this week and runs from May 1-4 at Auckland's Viaduct Events Centre. 'This year's programme is especially exciting, with strong representation from Indigenous artists, Pacific creatives, and voices that challenge, celebrate, and redefine what contemporary art from this region can be,' says Anna Jackson, director at Gow Langsford Gallery. Here are seven things to look out for: Horizons 2025 According to McAndrew, smaller galleries reported annual sales growth of 17 percent reflected in the more affordable work by emerging artists. Aotearoa Art Fair has supported emerging artists since 2021 when a Boosted campaign run by Becky Hemus raised funds to help new artists showcase their work. Now editor of Art News Aotearoa and The Art Paper, Hemus has, with support from law firm Chapman Tripp, created Horizons 2025 – three booths platforming fresh artistic practices from Aotearoa and the wider Pacific rim. 'Emerging artists are still testing their practice and are innovating in interesting ways and often put an incredible amount of resource and time into each piece which far exceeds any sale price,' says Hemus. 'For collectors, they are investing in enabling the artist to keep making work – giving them money, giving them confidence, freeing up space in their studio. Collectors like to know they were part of someone's journey. They also like to see the world in new ways – which emerging artworks often provide in spades.' Robyn Penn Since opening in Auckland last year, Artor Contemporary has quickly established itself as a platform for emerging talent. Among the highlights at Artor's booth will be two large-scale encaustic paintings by Robyn Penn, a current master's candidate at the University of Auckland's Elam School of Fine Arts. Known for her ethereal, monochrome depictions of cloudscapes, Penn employs the ancient technique of encaustic – layering wax and resin onto canvas to blur the line between painting and object. Penn's work first garnered wider attention during Artor's inaugural group exhibition, where two of her monochrome cloud paintings were acquired by filmmaker Taika Waititi. Artworks under $5k Gow Langsford will also have a second booth at the fair this year, separate from the blue-chip works by artists like Shane Cotton, Brett Graham, Steve Carr, and Sally Gabori. 'We've invited some of our established artists to create works at a lower price point, which would make their works available to new collectors,' explains Jackson. Highly regarded throughout Australasia, Sara Hughes has made a series of unique editions which will be launched at the fair. There are also new editions by both Chris Heaphy and John Pule, small original paintings by Michael Heights and sculptural works by Virginia Leonard. All of the artworks are priced under $5000. Nephi Tupaea One of the Pacific Sisters originally famous for her adornments and performances, Nephi Tupaea's exuberant kōwhaiwhai paintings sold out on opening night at her debut solo exhibition at Auckland's Tim Melville Gallery last year. Tupaea's bold compositions rooted in Māori visual traditions have been praised for their cultural depth and striking palette. According to Melville, 'She draws threads between artists like Gauguin and the racial discrimination suffered by Māori in Aotearoa after the wars, as they moved from the countryside to the cities.' The comparison to Paul Gauguin – best known for his stylized depictions of Polynesia during his time in Tahiti – invites reflection on the complex socio-political undercurrents that inform her work. Tupaea's growing profile was recently affirmed by the inclusion of one of her paintings in Te Paepae Aora'i – Where Gods Cannot Be Fooled, an exhibition staged in dialogue with Gauguin's World: Tōna Iho Tōna Ao at the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra. Performance art On Friday May 2 at noon, Britomart will become the stage for an extended performance by Walters Prize finalist Kalisolaite 'Uhila, blurring the boundaries between endurance, ritual, and social critique. Kelekele Mo'ui (Living Soil), will see the Tongan-born, New Zealand-based artist buried up to his neck in a mound of earth for six hours – a potent, visceral meditation on the human relationship with land, survival, and time. At 6pm, 'Uhila will be unearthed with spectators invited to observe and to consider the deeper meanings the performance evokes – from the essential life-giving properties of soil to the Tongan concept of maumau-taimi, or 'wasting time', a cultural framework that repositions idleness as a space for reflection and value. The performance is complemented by a selection of 'Uhila's paint spattered canvases, Kini Lotokolo (Cleaning the City), presented in collaboration with Michael Lett Gallery, on view nearby at the Pavilion Panels along Te Ara Tāhuhu and Galway Street. Jonny Niesche Australian artist Jonny Niesche is returning to Auckland for a solo show that opens at Starkwhite Gallery on May 2. Niesche, celebrated for his luminous abstractions and command of colour, uses transparent fabrics that he designs digitally and has printed before layering and stretching them over metal and mirrored frames. His work has attracted collectors worldwide including the fashion house Gucci, which acquired it for the flagship UK store and more recently collaborated with him on a limited range of its coveted silk scarves. Ironically, Fat Lava, his latest show, interrogates poor taste. It's named for a subset of glazes used in West German pottery between 1950 and 1970, discovered – and detested – by the artist in his youth in the 1980s. The work engages in a mischievous dialogue with memory, revulsion, and aesthetic appeal. Starkwhite will also present Niesche's work at their Art Fair booth. Aotearoa Art Fair Sculpture Trail Visitors to Viaduct Harbour may already have glimpsed its most enigmatic resident: a 15m-wide octopus, rendered in flowing, maze-like patterns, floating just above the water's surface. The monumental installation, Te Wheke-a-Muturangi (2022) by Lisa Reihana, is a centrepiece of the Aotearoa Art Fair Sculpture Trail, the first curated outdoor sculpture exhibition in Auckland's city centre in recent memory. Drawing on the Māori legend of Te Wheke-a-Muturangi, the mythical giant octopus pursued across the Pacific Ocean by the Polynesian navigator Kupe, the sculpture is an embodiment of cultural storytelling at scale. Installations by a roster of leading New Zealand artists, including newly commissioned pieces by David McCracken, Anton Forde, Gregor Kregar, Oliver Stretton-Pow, and Ben Pearce, transform the waterfront into an open-air gallery.


NZ Herald
28-04-2025
- Entertainment
- NZ Herald
Contemporary Artist Yona Lee Will Change The Way You See The World Around You
Sculptor Yona Lee, who winds mazes of stainless steel to expose and challenge the connotations of everyday objects, is set to showcase new works at the Aotearoa Art Fair. The artist speaks to Madeleine Crutchley about learning to weld, the influence of classical music and evoking emotion through small mundanities.

RNZ News
28-04-2025
- Entertainment
- RNZ News
Reviving the art of aute-making (bark cloth)
Exhibiting at this year's Aotearoa Art Fair is Nikau Hinden. Through years of research and hands-on practice, she has re-established aute-making in Aotearoa, using traditional techniques to create works that reconnect Maori art with its Polynesian origins. Tags: To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.