I thought I would of climbed more mountains by now
I thought I would of climbed more mountains by now
Bridget Reweti
June 4 – June 27, 2015
Opening: Wednesday June 3, 5:30pm
A moving image installation by Bridget Reweti (Ngāti Ranginui, Ngāi Te Rangi).
Mountain
climbing is the oldest metaphor in the book for success, an
analogy for conquering, a punch to sky in a kind of
fuck-yeah triumph. Layered on top of these colonial notions
of domination over the landscape is the religious rhetoric
that settled with it, as it is on the mountain-top where men
meet God. These ideas sit at odds with customary Māori
paradigms, where humanity is considered to be from, of and
belonging to the land.
''In February 2015 my sister, her partner and I left our car at Erewhon Station and headed towards the Adams Wilderness Area for the Garden of Eden Ice Plateau. A 9km stretch of gentle rolling snow and ice at an elevation of 2000m, the Garden of Edenis just west of the main divide, in the heart of the Southern Alps. It is adjacent to the Garden of Allah and features such names as Eve’s Rib, Cain’s Glacier, Angel col, the Devil’s Backbone and the Great Unknown''.
I
thought I would of climbed more mountains by now is
informed by these contrasts in the perception of landscape,
and builds upon the iconic imagery seen in Hugh
MacDonald’s This is New Zealand to question
colonial, religious, patriarchal and utopian landscape
ideologies implicit to New Zealand.
Publication Launch: Wednesday June 3, 5:30pm
An accompanying
publication, the second volume of In through the earth
and up to the sky, will be launched during opening
night. This publication has been produced to accompany
Caroline McQuarrie’s exhibitionHomewardbounder,
which was exhibited at Enjoy April 1 – April 25,
2015.