Postings from and about the art practice of Laura Marsh. Laura is a South Island Pakeha, currently based in Franklin, Auckland, Aotearoa New Zealand.
Showing posts with label The South Island. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The South Island. Show all posts
Monday, 1 July 2013
Monday, 2 April 2012
Matriarch for Sale: Whiteroom, Dunedin.
A WORK FOR SALE
at WHITEROOM, Dunedin
Matriarch #1
2010
Digital fabric print, wool, cotton, cedar wood
80 x 60 x 15cm
She is a huge pine which grows above the township of Wanaka.
One of an edition of 3, this one the only one with cedar frame.
Stands alone as a natural light box or can be mounted on the wall.
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J-Brown & The Mic Smith |
Sunday, 1 January 2012
PROUDLY ANNOUNCING!
I am very proud to announce that I am the 2012 recipient of the Olivia Spencer Bower Foundation Award. This year is proving already to be an exciting one artistically as I get used to the privilege of absolute freedom to make and create. I will be based in back in my homeland, the Mainland, The South Island of New Zealand, where there is no shortage of space...something I desire strongly while living in Auckland. Thank you to the Foundation for this opportunity. And I encourage every artist to apply!
http://www.oliviaspencerbower.org.nz/index.htm
http://www.oliviaspencerbower.org.nz/index.htm
Wednesday, 14 September 2011
Dowling Street Studios presents: Laura Marsh & Hamish Jones


The Dowling Street Studios is a collection of artist's studios filling the old Hallensteins factory building in Dunedin. Hamish and I took on the challenge of filling the enormous 24m x 4m x 8m high space. I wanted to air out a few of my works from my two post-grad years at AUT, and I wanted to have them shown in The South Island.
I created a new work for the show, The Republic Of Aramoana, a series of 35 'collector cards', each with a photo of a different flagpole found standing proudly in the yard of the houses and cribs of Aramoana in January. At the time I could not imagine why such a huge percentage of a town's population would have flag poles! It was a very exciting discovery. Research uncovered the cause, that in 1980 Aramoana declared itself The Republic of Aramoana in order to defend itself against the New Zealand Government building an aluminium smelter where the town still stands gracefully today. Environmental concerns were a key factor in the case against a smelter. On the back of each of the cards is a diagram from a study done in the seventies on the special nature of the huge salt marsh out the back of Aramoana.
Excited to have the vertical space to hang Pleasure Grounds up again.
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Pleasure Grounds (detail) 2009 |
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Laura Marsh Was Here Souvenir 2010, I Was Here Postcard Series 2010 |
The South Island Flag
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Hamish Jones - Black Sheep 2011, White Sheep 2011 |
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Hamish Jones - Fossil 2011 |
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Hamish Jones - Block Colour 2011 |
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Hamish Jones - Deconstruction/Reconstruction 2011 |
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Home Away From Home 2011, Pakeha Dream (dvd projection) 2010 |
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Pakeha Dream ... , Display Case (Prayer for a Pakeha, Club Pakeha, More Maori) 2010 |
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Display Case ... , Flagless City II 2009 |
Special thanks to Hamish for going hard at the mission; to Vanessa Cook for writing and sorting; to Anya Sinclair for organising; to Jamie Hanton at Blue Oyster Gallery for the lend of a projector; to Terry Brosnahan & John Cosgrove from Countrywide Magazine; to Viv and Gordon Jones, Graeme and Mum, and Dad...Thank you!
Labels:
Aramoana,
colonialism,
digital fabric print,
Dowling Street Studios,
Hamish Jones,
Laura Marsh,
lupins,
monument,
New Zealand,
pakeha,
post-colonialism,
republic,
The South Island,
video art,
wool
Wednesday, 20 April 2011
The Trouble With Being A Proud Pakeha
My art practice is motivated by a realisation that I have been deeply naïve about the cultural realities of my country. Moving from the South Island to the North Island was the first step towards understanding what it means to ‘be’ and ‘become’ Pakeha, and what this can mean in a global post-colonial context. Parallel to ongoing cultural research, I visually document North and South to allow motifs and signifiers to come to the foreground; Objects materialize from this process, operating as ‘souvenirs’ to moments of discovery. Essentially, my art practice applies a ‘soft activist’ approach to the colonial condition of overwriting history. These images are from my Master of Art & Design (Visual Arts) exhibition held at St Paul St Gallery, Auckland, in November 2010.
Labels:
Auckland,
colonialism,
digital fabric print,
flags,
Laura Marsh,
lupins,
maori,
New Zealand,
pakeha,
post-colonialism,
St Paul St Gallery,
The South Island,
video art,
visual art,
wool
Thursday, 17 March 2011
Souvenirs To Moments Of Discovery From 2009

The Russell Lupins of The South Island display a magnificent array of crayonbox colours in the summertime. Covering fields and riverbeds and lining the edges of the highways of the Central South Island, they create a heady sense of scenic wonder that belies their true nature of epidemic weed status, (as they negatively impacts on the habitat of threatened braided riverbed birds). In 2009 I explored these opposing sentiments with an 'illegal' street art project 'beautifying' Grey Lynn, Auckland City. Essentially the ongoing work is an analogy for the post-colonial realisations I've had after looking a little harder at the physical and cultural landscapes of Aotearoa New Zealand.
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