NZ photographer stars in major Paris exhibition
New Zealand photographer stars in major Paris exhibition
An exhibition by Wellington photographer Anne Noble is a
major exhibition in
the inaugural arts biennale Photoquai
2007 just opened in Paris.
The Quai Branly Museum is
presenting Noble¹s highly acclaimed depiction
of
childhood Ruby¹s Room as its contemporary
contribution to the new biennale,
which is focused
primarily on photography from artists living
outside
Europe. Photoquai has been timed to coincide with
Paris Photo the world¹s
premier art fair for
photography.
Three new exhibitions at the Quai Branly
Museum aim to draw attention to the
museum¹s
relationship with photography and its major collection of
more than
700,0000 photographs. Noble¹s exhibition is
positioned alongside a show of
East African
daguerreotypes (an early type of photograph) and photographs
of
African art taken by Walker Evans, considered the
finest American
documentary photographer of the twentieth
century. The exhibitions run until
mid-January.
Noble, who has exhibited widely throughout New Zealand
and Australia, has
also exhibited in Spain and Germany
but this is the first time her work has
been seen in
France. The Museum¹s showing of 28 large-scale photographs
from
Ruby¹s Room, and production of a 64-page monograph,
is major recognition for
the New Zealand artist who is in
Paris for the opening of the exhibition.
³It¹s very
affirming to have been selected and a huge opportunity to
expand
the audience for my work,² Noble says.
Ruby¹s Room is a distinctive, original and complicated
distillation of
childhood. Developed in collaboration
with her daughter Ruby between 1998
-2007, it challenges
conventional depictions of childhood creating a
catalogue
of the things children do with their mouths. Noble has
described
her project ³an alternative archaeology of
childhood².
³In taking these photographs, Noble has
not flinched. She has resisted any
motherly temptation to
gently tug the hair from Ruby¹s mouth, or to wipe
the
lolly stains from her chin. She does not chide her
daughter as she opens her
mouth to show her mother the
half-dissolved contents of her mouth. She
records these
small moments of play, from close range and in lurid
colour,
giving them a startling monumentality. Instead it
is the viewer who winces
as we are confronted with this
child¹s mouth writ large, an intrusion into
our notions
of what a representation of a child should be.²
[Kyla
McFarlane, 2004. The line between us: the maternal relation
in
contemporary photography. Monash University, Museum of
Art, Melbourne.]
Anne Noble is one of New Zealand¹s most
respected photographers. A major
survey of her work
States of Grace toured New Zealand from 2001-3. Her
most
recent work investigates the representation of
Antarctica.
ends