Roger Mortimer
Karori
9 October - 2 November, 2019
9 October 2019 - 2 November 2019 Following the success of his outing at the Auckland Art Fair in May, we are delighted to present Roger Mortimer's seventh solo exhibition in the gallery.
Karori sees the ongoing development of his distinctive juxtapositioning of contemporary marine maps of Aotearoa New Zealand with medieval imagery. While finely rendered compasses have often been included in Roger's map paintings, here we see a dramatic increase in scale, with the compass taking on the appearance of a mandala, suggesting the need for guidance in the spiritual as well as the material world. The form of these compasses with their distinctive triangle and circle forms is drawn from medieval maps but with a nod to Māori kowhaiwhai. A drive to understand Māori perspectives has been part of Roger's practice since he first entered Elam School of Fine Arts at the University of Auckland and went through the Te Toi Hou (Maori Arts) programme. His art has always 'looked to the past to approach the future' to paraphrase the famous whakataukī (Māori proverb). In acknowledgement of prior occupation of Aoteroa, Roger has removed European place names from his 'maps' and left the Māori names, some well-known, others marking lesser known places, mountains, rivers and events. Speaking at the Auckland Art Fair about Roger's work art historian Linda Tyler observed that in referencing the country's dual histories and bringing together European painting with Maori history, without appropriation or borrowing of symbolism, Roger can be seen to be ahead of his time. In using Māori place names as titles, he also emphasises the local. At a time of huge anxiety in the world, Roger's work speaks to the notion of the moral imagination. How do we collectively construct a vision of right and wrong when so many in the western world no longer believe or trust in 'the given', in the untrammelled 'progress' of capitalism and concepts of heaven and hell that have defined and shaped western thinking and social frameworks? The exhibition comprises five paintings including the magnificent large triptych Pakiri which covers the north Auckland east coast from Tawharenui in the south to Ruakaka in the north and includes Little Barrier and Great Barrier Islands. We also have Karori which covers the entrance to Wellington Harbour; Whariwharangi in Tasman Bay; Te Kaha - the entrance to Raglan Harbour and Te Kuri - Poverty Bay. |
Pakiri
2019 Roger Mortimer watercolour, gold dust and acrylic lacquer on canvas 1650 x 3320 mm Pakiri 2019 Roger Mortimer watercolour, gold dust and acrylic lacquer on canvas 1650 x 3320 mm Karori
2019 Roger Mortimer watercolour, gold dust and acrylic lacquer on canvas 1120 x 1220 mm Karori 2019 Roger Mortimer watercolour, gold dust and acrylic lacquer on canvas 1120 x 1220 mm Te Kuri
2019 Roger Mortimer watercolour, gold dust and acrylic lacquer on canvas 1070 x 1170 mm Te Kuri 2019 Roger Mortimer watercolour, gold dust and acrylic lacquer on canvas 1070 x 1170 mm Te Kaha
Te Kaha 2019 Whariwharangi
2019 Roger Mortimer watercolour, gold dust and acrylic lacquer on canvas 1120 x 1220 mm Whariwharangi 2019 Roger Mortimer watercolour, gold dust and acrylic lacquer on canvas 1120 x 1220 mm |