The New Zealand Herald

Te Papa mix of monsters, dinosaurs to wow kids

Youngsters can even ‘crawl into’ painting

- Melissa Nightingal­e

Monsters and dinosaurs will be bringing art to life for kids at Te Papa tomorrow as the museum reveals its newest art exhibition.

Children will be able to crawl inside a goblin market, make their own shadow puppets, and explore a three-tonne dinosaur nest in the Curious Creatures and Marvellous Monsters exhibition.

Auckland sculptor Gregor Kregar was one of the artists contributi­ng, building the shiny nest out of piles of old timber he found at a recycling station.

The wood, which was salvaged, denailed, and wrapped in silver material, has been fashioned into his piece, the Anthropoce­ne Shelter, which houses stainless steel sculptures of dinosaurs meant to resemble metallic blow-up toys.

“The dinosaurs are kind of based around blow-up, sort of cheap, massproduc­ed pool toys, but they’re obviously the antithesis of that because they’re hand-made out of stainless steel,” he said this week while he and his team put the finishing touches on the installati­on.

Kregar was inspired after spending time at the recycling station in Auckland, where he saw “mountains” of old wood languishin­g.

“I was always quite surprised with how much wood gets discarded all the time,” he said.

“I always wanted to kind of use it for something . . . this wood always just got dug into the landfill. I just thought it’s such a waste.

“I’m taking some that was discarded but I elevate it and give it another life and present it in another context.”

Weeks have gone into creating the shelter, which was installed at Te Papa over eight days. The dinosaur sculptures took months to make.

Kregar was excited about the

HFor a video go to nzherald.co.nz “playfulnes­s” of the installati­on and how visitors could interact with it.

Interactiv­e pieces are at the centre of the exhibition, which includes small doors children can open to view tiny artworks, and special tunnels and corridors to walk through. Dark, Anthropoce­ne Shelter,

Te Papa curator of modern art Chelsea Nichols said a century-old oil painting of a goblin market by artist Frank Craig was being transforme­d into a new experience for kids, by allowing them to “crawl into” the painting through an opening in the wall.

“We’re really excited with this exhibition to get kids using their imaginatio­ns.”

Te Papa brought in children from a local school and “mercilessl­y hounded” staff with kids to find out just what the young ones thought of the artwork going into the exhibition.

The exhibition contains a mix of works from well-known and celebrated New Zealand artists, including Judy Darragh, Francis Upritchard, Angela Singer, Alexis Hunter, Bill Hammond and Lisa Reihana, as well Lost in the as renowned internatio­nal artists such as Pablo Picasso and Albrecht Du¨ rer, and historical works dating to the 15th century.

The other new exhibition is Tony Fomison’s Lost in the Dark. Targeted at young adults, Fomison’s work focuses on the dark, intense paintings he produced during the early years of his career, from 1967 to 1975.

“Fomison painted marginal figures, finding a weird beauty in the monsters, martyrs and deformed figures that live on the fringes of society,” Nichols said.

“From a period of darkness in his own life, emerged these emotive and almost brutal paintings that made him one of the most important painters of his generation.”

The two exhibition­s will run until early November.

 ?? Photos / Mark Mitchell, File ?? Gregor Kregar created the which houses stainlesss­teel sculptures of dinosaurs. The Tony Fomison (left) exhibition,will also feature.
Photos / Mark Mitchell, File Gregor Kregar created the which houses stainlesss­teel sculptures of dinosaurs. The Tony Fomison (left) exhibition,will also feature.
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