Max on the high wire
24 May 2012
Max on the high wire
Whanganui UCOL Computer Graphic Design Honours student Max Deutschle has been selected as a semifinalist for the 2012 Fieldays No. 8 Wire National Art Award.
His entry The Hollow Tiki is a 3D
outline of a tiki constructed in No.8 wire.
The sculpture
stands 1.6 metres tall and is very minimal; in that it is
clearly a tiki but it is also mostly transparent—anything
behind the sculpture is clearly visible.
“It is about the loss of tradition, the loss of culture,” says Max. “Wire is a medium that in itself is symbolic of colonization, the ownership and splitting of land. This tiki is a shell, empty and hollow. It is symbolic of a loss of value and meaning.”
Launched in 1997, the annual Fieldays No. 8 Wire National Art Award challenges artists to create a sculpture from No.8 wire and has become renowned for the ingenious and unique entries it attracts. The award is co-ordinated by Waikato Museum and held at ArtsPost, and is sponsored by New Zealand National Agricultural Fieldays.
Well-known
corrugated iron sculptor Jeff Thomson will judge this
year’s Fieldays No.8 Wire National Art
Award.
The opening of the exhibition and the award
presentation will be held on Thursday 7 June at 5.30pm at
the ArtsPost Galleries in
Hamilton.
ENDS