3x2
Joanne Moar & Jim
Speers
Fiona Gunn & Frances Joseph
Phil Dadson & Mike
Stevenson
3x2 was a series of three exhibitions, each featuring two
artists, that ran at the Physics Room from February to June.
The artists were invited to present their work with the exhibition
space's context in mind, including its past uses and its wider surroundings.
One way of considering the work, then, is in relation to these things.
Fiona Gunn & Frances Joseph
were the two artists paired for the second of the three shows
in 3x2.
"During my stay as artist in residence at the University of Canterbury
last year I visited the physics room and discussed the possibility
of an exhibition. At that stage I thought of showing some of the
work then in progress. At the end of 1996 I decided to return to
live and work in New Zealand. I am currently in the process of sorting
and packing up twenty five years of my life away. The exhibition
at the physics room will be the first time my work has been shown
in NZ. These circumstances have influenced the work produced for
the 3x2 exhibition.
Frances Joseph "Attached relates to the dimensions and architecture
of the gallery space. It is clearly influenced by a postcard image
Summer, Canterbury Plains, where the patchwork of fields
stretches off to meet the snow capped peaks of the Alps. The photo
was taken from a plane. I was impressed by the point of view changes
as you climb up the stairs into the gallery space - at certain positions
the view out across the floor is more significant than the walls,
like an aerial perspective.
"The choice of medium (patchwork) references both the specific imagery
of the postcard, and the location of the gallery space within the
Crafts Centre. But it is also significant in other ways: As artist,
teacher and sole parent, I am interested in ways that women in both
traditional and modern societies combine creative work and parenting.
Patchwork is a medium that can be picked up and put down, it can
be worked on with other people. Traditionally the process has not
required the sort of obsessive solitary focus of more heroic art
media. It allows for the expression of a 'language of interruption'.
"The patchwork is cut from fabric objects (clothes, curtains, samples
etc) that I have accumulated over the years. Some of the fabrics
have personal associations (like the t shirt my baby son so adored),
others are from costumes I designed (from parades, theatre shows,
puppets), others remind me of certain places, people, histories
(the curtains from Lynne Street, A's pillowcases that I inherited
when she set off to tour the world some twenty years ago - we still
marvel at the fortitude of those pillowcases). The patchwork, from
my perspective is thickly, cloyingly, sentimental. I cannot bear
to throw these things away, but I must take stock, be rigorous,
sort things out, pack up properly. I can't arrive in Auckland this
July like some mad old bag lady with cases full of rags. So the
process of making this work has been a sort of preparation for departure
- an important ritual. I destroy and reassemble these things into
something else called art to send across as an introduction, my
first ever exhibition in NZ with an object quite literally made
up of parts of my past. "During my stay as artist in residence at
the University of Canterbury last year I visited The Physics Room
and discussed the possibility of an exhibition. At that stage I
thought of showing some of the work then in progress. At the end
of 1996 I decided to return to live and work in New Zealand. I am
currently in the process of sorting and packing up twenty five years
of my life away. The exhibition at the physics room will be the
first time my work has been shown in NZ. These circumstances have
influenced the work produced for the 3x2 exhibition.
"Someone looking at this work, at these pieces of worn, stained,
fabric cannot grasp the specific associations and stories that I
attach to the cloth. I imagine that some people will be repulsed
- the way you feel entering an op shop and being confronted by the
sad intimacy of used clothes and other peoples lives. I hope that
the work encourages the viewer to go beyond this response, to a
consideration of the way this landscape is constructed in this space
(in a room in a courtyard, in a complex) from which you cannot see
those incredible mountains. I hope that people don't walk on the
patchwork, however from past experience exhibiting floor pieces
I cannot be sure they won't. I don't want barriers and keep out
signs but I would prefer that the distant calico peaks remain just
that."
Reviews, Essays & Articles
Unevenly
Spaced
2 CENTS 1 June 1997
Felicity Milburn
Fiona Gunn and Frances Joseph @ The Physics Room
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