Nau mai, haere mai, welcome to EyeContact. You are invited to respond to reviews and contribute to discussion by registering to participate.

JH

Interesting lens - cool interiors

AA
View Discussion

These domiciles are in themselves impersonal and characterless (they have an anonymity that induces despair) but photographed this way they could almost be described as ‘sweet' or ‘pretty'. At first glance they take on an austere but tawdry modernist glamour. You have to look closely to see the hideous peeled wallpaper, stained mattresses, paper thin curtains or holes in the walls.

Auckland


Ann Shelton

room room


8 May - 20 June 2009

 

These twelve images are of bedrooms in the women’s wing in the Phoenix Building, run by the Salvation Army as part of the Drugs and Alcohol Rehabilitation Facility on Rotoroa Island in Hauraki Gulf. This hospital closed down in 2005, and shortly after the artist made the images. Her project was first shown at City Gallery last year.

In the Gus Fisher’s small gallery, Shelton’s photographs are presented as circular coloured images set onto white vertical rectangles, six positioned on each of two opposite walls. The circular format, based on a Claude (as in Claude Lorraine) looking glass, bends the lines so that even cupboard doors become warped, making everything convex. They look like enlarged peepholes positioned on doors in a hotel corridor. In the space they look a little crammed.

These domiciles are in themselves impersonal and characterless (they have an anonymity that induces despair) but photographed this way they could almost be described as ‘sweet’ or ‘pretty’. At first glance they take on an austere but tawdry modernist glamour. You have to look closely to see the hideous peeled wallpaper, stained mattresses, paper thin curtains or holes in the walls.

In having no human subject matter these rooms become refined in a pastelly, bathroom-décor sort of way. The lens also makes the spaces seem much bigger. Planes expand. The air stretches. They take on a perverse elegance.

Yet there is also a clinical ambience about this show. This is pristine, somewhat icy photography - with little warmth. The blemishes and scunge you find on close inspection help lessen that, but their ‘human factor’ only draws you in so far. You don’t get totally immersed. Though these interiors are interesting because of the distortions, you still get held at arm’s length. These images are too chilly, too depressing and (over time) too bland to get really close to.

John Hurrell

 

Print | Facebook | Twitter | Email

 

Recent Posts by John Hurrell

JH

‘Take What You Have Gathered From Coincidence.’

GUS FISHER GALLERY

Auckland

 

Eight New Zealand artists and five Finnish ones


Eight Thousand Layers of Moments


15 March 2024 - 11 May 2024

 

JH
Patrick Pound, Looking up, Looking Down, 2023, found photographs on swing files, 3100 x 1030 mm in 14 parts (490 x 400 mm each)

Uplifted or Down-Lowered Eyes

MELANIE ROGER GALLERY

Auckland


Patrick Pound
Just Looking


3 April 2024 - 20 April 2024

JH
Installation view of Richard Reddaway/Grant Takle/Terry Urbahn's New Cuts Old Music installation at Te Uru, top floor. Photo: Terry Urbahn

Collaborative Reddaway / Takle / Urbahn Installation

TE URU WAITAKERE CONTEMPORARY GALLERY

Titirangi

 


Richard Reddaway, Grant Takle and Terry Urbahn
New Cuts Old Music

 


23 March - 26 May 2024

JH
Detail of the installation of Lauren Winstone's Silt series that is part of Things the Body Wants to Tell Us at Two Rooms.

Winstone’s Delicately Coloured Table Sculptures

TWO ROOMS

Auckland

 

Lauren Winstone
Things the Body Wants to Tell Us

 


15 March 2024 - 27 April 2024