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Lonnie Hutchinson : black bird /

Contributor(s): Publisher: [Auckland] : Centre of Art Studies at the University of Auckland, 2015Description: 32 pages : colour illustrations ; 22 x 29 cmISBN:
  • 9780994108616
  • 0994108613
Other title:
  • Black bird
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • NX430 .N45L65 2015
Contents:
Foreword / Linda Tyler -- Voids and veils / Karl Chitham and Ioana Gordon-Smith -- Spectral visions / Ane Tonga -- Black bird / Stephanie Oberg -- Casting shadows / Linda Tyler.
Summary: "Lonnie Hutchinson is an Auckland-based artist of Sāmoan and Māori descent whose practice subtly addresses issues of female experience from indigenous and feminist perspectives. The survey exhibition Black Bird brings together performance, installation and animation works from the last seventeen years of Lonnie's practice, shown together for the very first time. A historical consciousness is reflected in the development of Hutchinson's visual language and motifs, which combines traditional Māori and Pacific design while paying homage to Pacific women's arts like tīvaevae (quilt making) and weaving"--University Of Auckland.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book Whitecliffe Library NZ & Pacific NZ & Pacific NZ&P N 7408 HUT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 0015300

"Published on the occasion of the exhibition 'Black Bird: Lonnie Hutchinson 1997-2013: A survey'"--Page 32.

Accompanies exhibition held at the Gus Fisher Gallery, The University of Auckland Friday 6 March-Saturday 2 May 2015, and the Dowse Art Museum, Lower Hutt, Friday 21 August-Sunday 29 November 2015.

Includes bibliographical references.

Foreword / Linda Tyler -- Voids and veils / Karl Chitham and Ioana Gordon-Smith -- Spectral visions / Ane Tonga -- Black bird / Stephanie Oberg -- Casting shadows / Linda Tyler.

"Lonnie Hutchinson is an Auckland-based artist of Sāmoan and Māori descent whose practice subtly addresses issues of female experience from indigenous and feminist perspectives. The survey exhibition Black Bird brings together performance, installation and animation works from the last seventeen years of Lonnie's practice, shown together for the very first time. A historical consciousness is reflected in the development of Hutchinson's visual language and motifs, which combines traditional Māori and Pacific design while paying homage to Pacific women's arts like tīvaevae (quilt making) and weaving"--University Of Auckland.

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