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Face Value: Video Portraiture from the Pacific


From the IVAN DOUGHERTY GALLERY, Sydney, we bring you---

Face Value: video portraiture from the Pacific
Moving image, identity and innovation.
Curators Rilka Oakley & Annabel Pegus
Open to public 30 August until 30 September 2007 New Zealand Portrait Gallery, Shed 11, Wellington Waterfront

Floor Talk with the artists Thursday 30 August 1pm – 2pm.
Curator Annabel Pegus & artists Jefferson Belt, Mark McLean, James Pinker, Rachael Rakena & Jim Vivieare will be speaking about their video installations in Shed 11. All Welcome.

There will be a further Floor Talk for the NZCP's World Towns. A photographic exhibition by Allan Chawner of small towns from around the world. Allan Chawner will speak at Shed 11 Friday 31 August 1pm to 2pm. All welcome.

Face Value: video portraiture from the Pacific presents the traditional genre of portraiture, through the moving image exploring notions of identity, within a contemporary regional context.

Leading video, sound and multimedia artists from the Pacific region show work informed by history, technology, globalisation and geographic location which considers social and familial origins, individual traits and distinctiveness, history, gender, ethnic and cultural diversity.

This is progressive portraiture encompassing multiple screens, shifting frames, sound, text, spoken word, metaphor and humour. The artworks are unique, engaging and aesthetically varied, exploring the potential of moving image portraiture. Many works are allegorical, fictional or conceptual, allowing for multiple readings such as in Christian Thompson’s stereotyped alter-egos and Jim Vivieaere + Jefferson Belt’s collages of intimate objects and personal spaces.

Each artist approaches contemporary identity from a unique angle. Vernon Ah Kee’s short, sharp self portrait playfully uses language, moving text and self-portraiture to represent current Australian black/white politics to a deadly serious effect. Social and emotional conditioning are the focus of Lyndal Jones’ He Must Not Cry. While the upbeat rhythmic sounds of Sheyne Tuffery’s video pushes the aesthetic bounds of this genre into the twenty first century through personal connections to his surroundings. John Gillies, My Sister’s Room, is a highly personal portrait of the artist’s sister slowly revealed through grainy hand-held video scans over photographs of her face, resulting in a portrait construced of absence and memory.

Lonnie Hutchinson refers directly to the incarceration of Island women in the holds of Pearl Traders, the history of sexual exploitation and its ramifications on the sex industry. Internationally renowned artist Rachael Rakena layers performance, text and sound as two underwater figures communicate through movement and a backdrop of email. And working with forensic scientists, inspired Denis Beaubois to create a series of silent, fixed and un-blinking faces which slowly and subtly morph through 11,000 different people reinventing racial stereotypes.

Artists included : Vernon Ah Kee, Denis Beaubois, John Gillies, Lonnie Hutchinson, Lyndal Jones, Janet Merewether, James Pinker + Mark McClean, Rachael Rakena, Christian Thompson, Sheyne Tuffery, Jim Vivieaere and Jefferson Belt

This exhibition was held in conjunction with the NZ Centre for Photography's "World Towns".


Events: 30 Aug 2007 Curator Annabel Pegus & artists Jefferson Belt, Mark McLean, James Pinker, Rachael Rakena & Jim Vivieare speak about their video installations in Shed 11

Later Event: 17 December
John Badcock: Passing People