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BJP

Ritual Ecologies

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Zina Swanson, Waterfall, 2015, brass taps, handblown glass rods Zina Swanson, Waterfall, 2015, detail, brass taps, handblown glass rods Zina Swanson, Log Wig, 2015, woodgrain vinyl, pine log veneer, synthetic wig Zina Swanson, Log Wig, 2015, detail, woodgrain vinyl, pine log veneer, synthetic wig Zina Swanson, The Ultimate Threat, 2014, terracotta, match, fishing braid Zina Swanson, The Ultimate Threat, 2014, detail, terracotta, match, fishing braid Zina Swanson, Birds and Rice Crackers. Zina Swanson, Concrete Dirt Parfait, 2014 Zina Swanson, Hot Snake, 2014 Zina Swanson, In Luck, 2015 Zina Swanson, Measuring Air Measuring Nothing, 2015 Zina Swanson, Marble Veneer Brass Dust

Less a focused statement of installation as her previous major outings at the Hocken Library and the Dunedin Public Art Gallery, this collection retains an aesthetic and conceptual unity while presenting a steady progression of Swanson's practice. Built upon a wry and delicate investigation of the intersection between the human and natural worlds her work probes softly at the inherently drawn distinction between the two and what the negotiation of this distinction may actually mean.

Dunedin

 

Zina Swanson
Concrete Dirt Parfait

 

2 September - 19 September 2015

State of Princes is the newest gallery to appear from the restless flux of the Dunedin creative scene. Occupying the same shop-front location as the popular A Gallery, enough time has passed between the two for the new venture to stand beyond of the shadow of the past and seek to form its own identity. So far in its short run the space has courted a host of emerging names in a series of tentatively ambitious shows. Attempting to exit the gate with an element of brand recognition State of Princes has presented work by current Frances Hodgkins Fellow John Ward-Knox, forthcoming Fellow Miranda Parkes, and most recently 2013 Fellow Zina Swanson with Concrete Dirt Parfait; a selection of sculptural and pictorial works.

Less a focused statement of installation as her previous major outings at the Hocken Library (at the end of the Hodgkins Fellowship in 2014) and at the Dunedin Public Art Gallery (from earlier this year), this collection retains an aesthetic and conceptual unity while presenting a steady progression of Swanson’s practice. Built upon a wry and delicate investigation of the intersection between the human and natural worlds her work probes softly, yet insistently, at the inherently drawn distinction between the two and what the negotiation of this distinction may actually mean.

With Concrete Dirt Parfait the organic presence of nature has begun to recede, becoming something epiphenomenal to its own interaction with ‘civilisation’. Plants which have reappeared throughout Swanson’s work as both pictorial subject and sculptural elements have all but disappeared here, replaced by pine veneer wrapped around wood-grain vinyl. While human impact on the natural environment is reported to us in more disastrous terms each day, Swanson avoids sounding a clarion of pessimism and despair through highly aesthetic works underscored with a soft humour.

The seven clean and minimal watercolours included in this exhibition probe at the methodologies by which nature has been sublimated through scientific quantification and cultural rituals of superstition and domesticity. Measuring Air, Measuring Nothing, for instance, depicts a square rule bracketing an amorphous light-grey blob of pigment. The rigidity of the tool is not matched the nuance required by the task and any measurement can only be an approximation.

In Luck references Swanson’s recent public gallery outing with the outline of a hand traced with lines of four-leafed clovers, concentrating in the fingertips. The association might be revelatory, the charms and invocations paying off through that most reliable vector of good fortune - hard work, and every artist makes their own luck by the labour of their hands. Here the negotiable vagaries of fate channelled through action are perhaps more reliable than the imprecisions of science.

Elements of nature are tentatively referenced in Birds and Rice Crackers and Tropical Shower but pushed from centre stage by the human world. In the former only part of a beak is present, leaning in from outside of the picture plane towards three crumbling and rather sad looking crackers. In the latter a pre-fabricated shower cubicle sits amidst lush, broad-leafed vegetation beaded with drops of moisture. The incongruity of this imagery is subtly unsettling, suggesting narratives of a dislocation in the inherent order of the world.

Completing the exhibition are three sculptural works for which the paintings serve as parentheses, bringing them together as an associative whole charting the trajectory of Swanson’s practice. Recycled from the 2014 show, No Need For Water, is The Ultimate Threat, a twisted length of terracotta enclosed fishing braid terminating in a red-headed safety match. Beads of terracotta are spaced along the line like or fishing floats crusted in mud left by receding floodwaters while the match evokes the easily accessed destructive totality of fire. It is a decorative object haunted with empty utility and underlying malice.

Its form echoing the shape of a matchstick, Log Wig realises in material form an illustrational work from the same 2014 show. A roll of wood-grain patterned linoleum is held in place by circlets of wood veneer and topped with a black synthetic wig. Here even the human is absent, replaced by an artificial signifier adrift in a world that is chic, clean, and wholly manufactured.

Finally, the most ambitious piece of this show is Waterfall, a series of brass taps connected by angular rods of hand-blown glass. This emblematic substitute for water flows from one tap to the next from a spot on the wall, tumbling across the floor through invisible pipes of tangled geometries. This x-ray view of an impossible plumbing infrastructure suggests a switch of conceptual scale where an apparently chaotic and dynamic system viewed from the appropriate distance assumes a pattern and regularity that denies all perception of movement.

The clean edged precision to Swanson’s work speaks to a deeper sense of order that exists behind the seeming chaos of nature that we human beings then attempt to map an imposed sense of order on top of, while ritual is employed the apprehensive negotiation between the two. Paradise must always be troubled lest it be lost. These are the things we must deal with and deal with them we must, but this does not mean that the experience cannot be without aesthetic pleasure. Swanson suggests that our world is already past a state of nature and it is what we do with what remains that counts most.

Brendan Jon Philip

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