Travel Stories VI: Otira/Germany - Schnittstelle/Interface
Time Capture Boxes: Otira
Ina Johann
February 20 - March 17, 2001
German born artist Ina Johann has exhibited widely in Europe, but
this will be her first major solo exhibition since moving to New
Zealand in 1997. In an ongoing process of collecting, conserving,
and mapping, Johann creates elaborate sculptural assemblages from
found objects, using her subjective observations to reflect and
question social ritual.
Otira/Germany - Interface/Schnittstelle
is part of her Travel Stories series, and is a response to the Oblique
site specific art project which took place in the small South Island town
Otira in 1999. Traditional touristic emblems such as the holiday snapshot
and travel souvenirs are reconfigured, as Johann places abandoned remnants
from the Otira township (a child's gumboot, a dirty sign, a sticking plaster)
in immaculate white display cases. Images of Europe are overlaid photographically
with images of Otira, creating an uneasy juxtaposition between the tiny
rural township and a bustling, cosmopolitan centre. The resultant pictorial
blurring can be seen to mirror the often-fractured feeling of the migrant
or traveler, merging the familiar and strange to create new, hybrid cultures.
Reviews & Essays
Fresh - A series profiling
Contemporary New Zealand Practitioners
Essay by Lee Devenish
in The Physics Room Annual
2001
ISBN 0-9582359-1-0
Classy
to dull
The Press, 2001 Mar. 14, p. 34
Ussher, Robyn.
Installations by Melissa Laing, Ina Johann, Nathan Pohio.
Fresh
Art New Zealand, #99, winter 2001, p.52
Margaret Duncan
about Ina Johann
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