2011 NZ Venice Biennale Exhibition To Show In Paris
2011 NZ Venice Biennale Exhibition To Show In Paris
Creative New Zealand and Christchurch Art Gallery director Jenny Harper are pleased to announce that Michael Parekowhai will show his 2011 Venice Biennale exhibition On first looking into Chapman’s Homer at Paris’s renowned musée du quai Branly.
Michael Parekowhai’s
exhibition will travel to Paris at the conclusion of the
Venice project in October with three works being showcased
at the museum. The two bronze grand pianos, each supporting
a cast bronze bull, A Peak in Darien and Chapman’s Homer
will be installed in early November 2011 in the grounds of
the museum beside rue de l’Université, a key route for
pedestrians visiting the nearby Eiffel Tower. Te Papa’s E
Tu Ake will still be on at this time and connections may be
made with this exhibition of New Zealand work.
In
February 2012 the carved Steinway, He Korero Purakau mo Te
Awanui o Te Motu: Story of a New Zealand River will be
positioned in the entrance foyer of the museum with a series
of recitals planned.
“Follow-on invitations are a
significant way for the value of the Venice Biennale project
to be registered and they also demonstrate the level of
respect shown to our artists who are selected to show there.
We welcome this opportunity to extend Parekowhai’s major
presentation in Europe and Christchurch Art Gallery is
pleased to be assisting the artist and his team to show his
Venice work in a different context in another key European
cultural hub,” says Jenny Harper.
Creative New
Zealand Arts Council Chair, Alastair Carruthers is delighted
that the artist has received this invitation. “The Venice
Biennale continues to provide New Zealand artists with the
chance to present work at the highest level overseas. This
remarkable exhibition deserves a wider audience and Michael
Parekowhai should be congratulated on its
success.”
The exhibition will return to New Zealand
mid next year at Christchurch Art Gallery. “It will be
exciting to welcome this key work back home a year after it
opened in Venice, keeping the Biennale heartbeat strong at
home as well as overseas,” says Jenny Harper.
The
continued success of Michael Parekowhai’s exhibition in
Venice follows it being picked by The Independent as one of
the winners of this year’s biennale. A number of
influential journalists visited the exhibition during the
Vernissage from The Art Newspaper, ArtAsiaPacific, The
Guardian, Art Review, Frieze, Tate and Royal Academy
Magazine alongside representatives from New York’s Museum
of Modern Art, London’s Saatchi and Hayward Galleries, as
well as from public art galleries in Canada, San Francisco
and Australia.
To date a daily average of 300 people
visit the New Zealand exhibition, consistently rating it
‘excellent’ with many commenting on the variety of music
performed on the carved piano, their identification with the
carvings and the magnificence of the large-scale
sculptures.*
Announcement of Commissioner and process
for 2013 artist selection
Creative New Zealand has
started planning for the 2013 Venice Biennale with the
announcement that Jenny Harper, director of Christchurch Art
Gallery, will continue as commissioner for the 2013 project.
A deputy commissioner will also be appointed as a
professional development opportunity.
A panel, chaired
by Arts Council Chair Alastair Carruthers, will be convened
in late September to commence the selection of the artist(s)
for 2013. The panel will comprise of gallery directors and
visual arts experts, including Māori representation. Prior
to the selection meeting the Commissioner will seek advice
from the wider visual arts sector and invite them to propose
names of artists and/or artist/curator teams.
The Arts
Council will consider the panel's recommendations and
expects to make an announcement in late
October.
Creative New Zealand is delighted that the
2013 Head of the Patrons will be Dayle Mace whose
contribution to the fund-raising alongside Dame Jenny Gibbs
over the last few biennales has been invaluable. Mace will
be assisted by Leigh Melville.
In 2011 the Patrons of
the Venice Biennale raised a record amount for the New
Zealand exhibition of $312,000 and over 70 patrons attended
the opening week or Vernissage – the largest contingent so
far in the ten year history of New Zealand’s presence at
the Venice Biennale.
Creative New Zealand will also
work closely with Te Papa Tongarewa, Museum of New Zealand
on the realisation of the New Zealand exhibition in
2013.
Ends