Weekend Herald

Winning art praised for powerful elegance

Anthony Byrt looks at contempora­ry art’s importance Weekend

- Dionne Christian Arts editor Sex act ‘ consensual’ Workers win $ 127,000 More for keeper’s children

Wellington artist Shannon Te Ao has won this year’s Walters Prize, taking home a $ 50,000 cheque.

Te Ao , who was born in Sydney but now lives and works in Wellington, was selected for Two shoots that stretch far out 2013 — 14, a video work in a setting featuring plants, furniture and lights.

The video features Te Ao, barefoot and wearing a black T- shirt and jeans, reciting a poem. In different scenes he speaks to geese, chickens, a swan, a rabbit, a wallaby and a donkey. The words are taken from a 19th century waiata and Te Ao translates from te reo to English, using song and speech.

The work was first presented at the 2014 Biennale of Sydney, but Okea ururoatia ( never say die) was new.

Earlier this year, Te Ao, of Ngati Tuwharetoa descent, told the Herald he wanted to highlight how we try to communicat­e with one another, but often end up talking past one another; the title references the whakatauki ( proverb) E kimi ana i nga¯ ka¯ wai i toro ki tawhiti, which describes a desire to find one’s roots or trace relationsh­ips.

“I’ve always been interested in things which aren’t black and white, the spaces in between, so I want to think about how we really communicat­e with one another,” he said. “What I hope the work does, regardless of those who are sitting across from us, is to reinforce the requiremen­t to respect and be respected and think about how we might calibrate the language we use.”

The announceme­nt was made by Doryun Chong, the Walters Prize 2016 internatio­nal judge, at a dinner at Auckland Art Gallery. Chong says he was intrigued, touched and moved by Te Ao’s art.

“As I left the space of his art, I felt as if I had not only been teleported but also had been transforme­d.

“I imagined him citing those lines [ of an historic Maori song] to the end of time, with the rabbits, ducks and chickens, wallaby, swan and donkey by his side, while the plants wither and die, and come back to life again, and then again.

“I would like to thank Shannon for helping me remember that a powerful work of art is sometimes created by an elegant formula of a simple gesture and repetition­s.”

But he says all the artworks shown for the Walters Prize 2016 gave him the impression he was travelling to unfamiliar places. Chong noted that while the four finalists — Joyce Campbell, Nathan Pohio, Lisa Reihana and Te Ao — were exploring issues of internatio­nal interest and importance, they brought unique touches to their work and he was impressed with its intensity.

Former Walters Prize winners contempora­ry New Zealand artists include Luke Willis Thompson ( 2014), Kate Newby ( 2012) and Dan Arps ( 2010). The Walters Prize is awarded for an outstandin­g work of contempora­ry New Zealand art produced and exhibited in the past two years, and 2016 marks the eighth iteration of the biennial award at Auckland Art Gallery.

The award was initiated to help create a greater understand­ing of contempora­ry art in New Zealand and to make it a more widely recognised, debated and prominent feature of the country’s cultural life. The Kiwi cat that thinks it is a sheep has gone global. The 8- month- old moggy called Steve lives on a farm at Ngamatapou­ri in South Taranaki. Owner Amanda Whitlock posted a picture of Steve hanging out with the lambs earlier this week and it went viral on social media. British papers the Telegraph, the Mirror and the Daily Mail have followed the story, as well as People magazine in the US. The High Court has upheld a New Zealand Dental Council decision to suspend Northland dentist Osvaldo Reyes Gonzalez until he successful­ly completes a competency programme and an exam. An interim suspension was enforced in July 2014 after complaints from at least 25 patients he had treated at Lumino in Kerikeri. The navy officer accused of sexually violating a junior has told a jury the interactio­n was consensual. Scott Christophe­r Devonport Ward is on trial at the Auckland District Court on a charge of sexual violation of a junior naval officer in October 2011. The woman, who has automatic name suppressio­n, alleges Ward forced his way into her bed. Workers at a food court on Auckland’s North Shore will get more than $ 127,000 owed to them after their employers breached employment law. The five cleaners at Food City in the Northcote Shopping Centre missed out on holiday pay and were only paid the minimum wage for 40 of the 60 hours they worked each week. The company was also hit with a $ 37,500 penalty from the Employment Relations Authority. Hamilton’s council has decided to give another $ 80,000 to the children of zoo- keeper Samantha Kudeweh, 43, who was mauled to death by a tiger after being fined earlier in the month. The council said the money would be put into a trust for Kudeweh’s two children, Billy and Sage.

 ??  ?? See Also Shannon Te Ao’s video, in which he recites a poem to various animals, intrigued and moved the judge. Dentist suspended
See Also Shannon Te Ao’s video, in which he recites a poem to various animals, intrigued and moved the judge. Dentist suspended
 ??  ?? Cat sheep goes viral
Cat sheep goes viral

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand