Art New Zealand

Career Management Louise Menzies at the Hocken

It has been commonplace for some time to see making art as a form of research. Artists work in tertiary institutions and collect PBRF (Performance Based Research Funding) points. But Aucklander Louise Menzies really is the most conscientious of artist-researchers. Her research is deep and detailed, and she brings to light what would otherwise remain obscure or invisible. She has signed off from her residency in Dunedin as the Frances Hodgkins Fellow in admirably geekish style, with an exhibition at the Hocken Library that reveals the extent to which she has made use of that institution’s seemingly bottomless collections.

This is not to say that the exhibition is an encyclopaedic record of Menzies’ research, or that we wade through masses of information. Rather, it is a sparse, distilled summary: at one end, a relatively short video; at the other, three items of furniture, a two-page newspaper spread and a calendar; in between, a series of black-and-white prints. None of it can be ‘got’ straight off the bat, because there is a whole lot of history behind each carefully

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Art New Zealand

Art New Zealand6 min read
Weaving Fact & Fiction
Maureen Lander (Ngāpuhi, Te Hikutu) uses Kemp House, New Zealand's oldest existing building, as a setting for an installation that explores events that took place some 200 years ago but continue to impact Māori lives. Through a combination of archiva
Art New Zealand2 min read
Ulterior Altars
There must be few viewers who remain unmoved by Ruby Millichamp's outsized photographs of claymation-like scenes, familiar and weird as they are. It is difficult to imagine a place as intimate—sacred even—as the bathroom sink. 'They are common but al
Art New Zealand6 min read
Legend
I never met Hamish Kilgour. I don't profess to an encyclopaedic knowledge of the music of The Clean or his wider musical catalogue. I make these admissions not for some critical impartiality, but because both the personality of Hamish Kilgour and his

Related