Postings from and about the art practice of Laura Marsh. Laura is a South Island Pakeha, currently based in Franklin, Auckland, Aotearoa New Zealand.
Sunday, 1 April 2012
Tuesday, 20 March 2012
Autumn: Call & Response @ Sculpture Park, Hamilton
I was chosen to be part of the Autumn exhibition Call & Response at the Sculpture Park at the Waitakaruru Arboretum near Hamilton. I reinstated my macrocarpa flagpole, this time with Flags for the Locals. The first flag flying is dedicated to the humble blackberry.
Big thanks to Kate Darrow & Kim Paton for selecting my work for one of five Ebbett Prestige Seed Funding Awards of $500, and of course thank you to Ebbett Prestige for supporting the exhibition, much appreciated!
Blackberry
Concept: Rather than being
‘unwanted’, the weed could be regarded from a Darwinian perspective as a winner
of an evolutionary process. For arguments sake the attributes of the local
weeds, Pampas, Blackberry and Gorse can be seen in a beneficial light – beauty,
food source, shelter etc. Though in hindsight the introduction of Gorse into
New Zealand was an ecological mistake, the protection it can give native
seedlings in their early stages of growth during ecological re-colonising is a
valuable attribute. These oppositional ideas draw
an analogy to and describe the cultural conundrum I am faced with as I address
my need for pride in my cultural heritage as descendent of colonial immigrants.
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
Saturday, 20 August 2011
NOW @ Second Storey: August 2011
My first solo show, NOW, was held at Second Storey: an artist-run space on Karangahape Road, Auckland, NZ.
A Flag That Has Now Written On It flies atop the building next door to Second Storey.
A CCTV security camera watches from across the road and wirelessly transmits the video signal back across to a receiver in the window of Second Storey.
In the back room the projector shows a static-harassed image of a pole that holds aloft the intermittently billowing flag.
In the front room Monument hangs, the tails of the vertical flags going with the lie of the floor.
(A Flag With Now Written On It atop the La Gonda Building on K Rd.)
Thursday, 14 July 2011
PRACTISE: In the Interest of Self-motivation
Wednesday, 15 June 2011
PRINT SEASON: February 2011
A duo show with Rosemarie Nightingale, in St Paul St's Gallery III, Auckland New Zealand...
& my first show after my Masters exhibition.
Home Away from Home heralds a moment of the 'connective synthesis' that underlies the methodology of my practice. I can't recall how the two elements came to mind, but it was at seperate moments; the timing of a deadline being the final weld. The green canvas tarpaulin was the floor to my grandparents' caravan awning decades ago, travelling the length and breadth of the countryside. And since used for many other purposes - painting drop-sheet, trailer cover, and for the last few years living in the back of Dad's jet boat, serving as the picnic mat on the stony beaches of Lake Wanaka.
The lonely trees have been transplanted from the back blocks of the West Coast of Auckland, my second home. The stamp of the colonial landscape is dominant, and the shifty nature of being descended (so recently) from colonial movers and shakers is brought to the fore.
This work is an example of the unusual demands I put on the high-tech (only one in the SOuthern Hemisphere) digital fabric printing machine at the Textile & Design Lab at AUT University, Auckland, NZ. http://www.tdl.aut.ac.nz/
The flat bed is definitely not the 3.2m x 2m size of the tarp, so it was printed in 3 parts and (almost) immaculately lined up with digital precision, proudly leaving it very hard to spot the joins. The close up image shows the original stamp on the tarpaulin, and names its point of origin, my home town, Dunedin.
Two video works, Never Ending Sunset I (Otago Hinterland) and Never Ending Sunset II (West Coast AK), serve to aid contemplation of where it is that I am and have come from. Because 'if you don't know where you're from, you won't know where you're going', (which might be a hip hop quote?). The videos are edited to first run forward for approximately a quarter of an hour, then are seamlessly joined to the same shot playing backwards, which is then looped for an endless experience of blissful dusk.
& my first show after my Masters exhibition.
Home Away from Home heralds a moment of the 'connective synthesis' that underlies the methodology of my practice. I can't recall how the two elements came to mind, but it was at seperate moments; the timing of a deadline being the final weld. The green canvas tarpaulin was the floor to my grandparents' caravan awning decades ago, travelling the length and breadth of the countryside. And since used for many other purposes - painting drop-sheet, trailer cover, and for the last few years living in the back of Dad's jet boat, serving as the picnic mat on the stony beaches of Lake Wanaka.

This work is an example of the unusual demands I put on the high-tech (only one in the SOuthern Hemisphere) digital fabric printing machine at the Textile & Design Lab at AUT University, Auckland, NZ. http://www.tdl.aut.ac.nz/
The flat bed is definitely not the 3.2m x 2m size of the tarp, so it was printed in 3 parts and (almost) immaculately lined up with digital precision, proudly leaving it very hard to spot the joins. The close up image shows the original stamp on the tarpaulin, and names its point of origin, my home town, Dunedin.
Two video works, Never Ending Sunset I (Otago Hinterland) and Never Ending Sunset II (West Coast AK), serve to aid contemplation of where it is that I am and have come from. Because 'if you don't know where you're from, you won't know where you're going', (which might be a hip hop quote?). The videos are edited to first run forward for approximately a quarter of an hour, then are seamlessly joined to the same shot playing backwards, which is then looped for an endless experience of blissful dusk.
Rosemarie's work sat beautifully alongside mine. The map is of Mt Ruapehu and the National Park. The casting 'prints' of rocks are made of rocks from with the park, but of course aren't allowed to be removed.
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