Kapiti News

Surprised and honoured

Waikanae artist Kate Hartmann was thriled after being named one of four winners of the Open Award The Arotake Toi Mahara Arts Review

-

It’s a compulsion to create, to explore and make real the thoughts in your head.

The Arotake Toi Mahara Arts Review is one of Mahara Gallery’s biggest events, and this year there were four winners of the Open Award. Waikanae artist Kate Hartmann was one of those four, and said she was surprised and honoured to receive the award.

The opening of the review exhibition, which is done biennially, was held in Toi Mahara’s Coastlands gallery, and this year it was timed to coincide with the festival programme celebratin­g the reopening of the gallery after its two-year rebuild.

The review was created more than a decade ago to give Kāpiti and Horowhenua artists the opportunit­y to showcase the diversity and quality of art being produced across the district.

Hartmann couldn’t attend the opening function and was surprised when her phone was flooded with messages in the minutes after the award for her work, Marking Time, was announced by Toi Mahara patron Darcy Nicholas, who described it as “a wonderful piece of creative art in any country”.

“Building the base from glued pieces of newspaper and the visual statement that time is only a moment in space, the broken parts of the clock were symbols of the uncertain future — brilliant abstract visual words,” he said.

Hartmann said it was an absolute honour to receive the award, and that it was made more meaningful by being given amongst her peers in her home gallery, and “at this very special time with the reopening of Toi Mahara”.

“I was very surprised. You know when you have created a strong piece, but I was amongst a very talented peer group of artists. I was very honoured.”

She said the piece started as her work usually does — “with a feeling, a nostalgic yearning for the past, simpler perhaps easier times, a questionin­g of what is truth and what is not”.

“I remembered I had put away a stash of old newspapers found during a house renovation a few years ago. The old Dominion and Evening Posts from 1949 and 1950, beautifull­y patinaed with age, had been used to pack out the hot water cylinder.

“I started to read through the pages and was immediatel­y struck by some difference­s but also many similariti­es to the present. Some things change, some stay the same, but time is constantly passing.”

Hartmann said she shares the view of many artists that her art practice is a vocation.

“It’s a compulsion to create, to explore and make real the thoughts in your head.

“I have been drawing and painting since I was a young child. I remember getting into trouble regularly for doing things like creating sculptures out of the bath soaps and bringing all sorts of ‘materials’ into the house.”

Today Hartmann is best known for establishi­ng Tutere Gallery and Creative Space and developing the 100 Days a Journey programme which she has run for the past six years.

“In August this year I was fortunate enough to be able to reclaim my studio space and gallery at Waikanae Beach.

“This allows me to not only create more artwork but to have a physical space in which to connect with other creatives to work on community and social arts initiative­s which I am passionate about.”

Darcy Nicholas, who selected the works for the exhibition as well as the award recipients, said he’d been greatly impressed by the quality of the work submitted.

As well as Hartmann’s award, which was sponsored by Coastlands, Ben Caldwell (sponsored by Toi Mahara) and Storm Davenport (sponsored by Angela Buswell Team Harcourts) received Merit Awards while Rosemary Mortimer received the Highly Commended Award (sponsored by Athfield Architects).

A further award, The People’s Choice category, sponsored by the Friends of Mahara, will be made during the last weekend of the exhibition based on visitor votes.

Arotake Toi Mahara Arts Review will be showing in the Coastlands gallery until January 28.

 ?? ?? Kate Hartmann with her piece Marking Time.
Kate Hartmann with her piece Marking Time.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand