John Drawbridge The Protest Works Online Show

+64 021.453.418:: thelab@fe29.com

1 Hallway from front door 2 new
3 Hallway from Gallery door new
3a Hallway Windflow 2 new
4 Hallway French Pacific New
5 Hallway Kapiti new
6 Hallway Fallout New
7 Hallway Bushwalk new
10 Gallery from hallway new
10a Gallery Aries Corner new
11 Gallery Back Wall new
11a Gallery Whale Wave Corner new
12 Gallery Whale Wave Corner 2 new
13 Gallery to Hallway 1 new
13a Silver Seabird Shadows I
13 Gallery Soaring Fish cornwe new
13b Main Gallery to hallway 3a new
20 Office from hallway new
20a Office Back wall
21 Office Back wall with bottles
22 Office Bottles 2 new
23 Office Glass and Shadow
24 Office to hallway 1
40 Hallway to Living with Carrington new
41 Living Market new
42 Living to Kitchen
43a Living Alcove
44 Living Alcove LIght on Hangar & Portloe Cornwell
45 Main Gallery to hallway 3a
46 Main Gallery to bedroom
30 Bedroom Window Wall new
31 Bedroom Two Sleeping Women 2 new
32 Bedroom REclining Woman & Double Portrait new

One of New Zealand’s leading and most accomplished artists, Drawbridge was awarded an MBE in 1978, and in 2002 he received an Honorary Doctorate of Literature from Massey University. His work is held in some of the world’s most celebrated collections, including the British Museum and the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. His public works in NZ include the 42m long mural in the Beehive Banquet Hall, Wellington; the Expo ‘70 mural for Osaka, Japan (now at Auckland University); the NZ House mural, London (now at Victoria University, Wellington); and the stained glass windows and Stations of the Cross in the Home of Compassion, Island Bay, Wellington.

Drawbridge was a brilliant and diverse visual artist. In a career spanning over 50 years, he created a challenging, exciting and varied body of work. His Wellington studio overlooked the Pacific Ocean and he often explored the nuances of the coastline and ocean in his paintings and prints. Interested in what he called the “atmospheric elements of the earth and in humanity”, he experimented with how combining intense colour and delicate mark-making could create rich experiences for the eye and mind. Unusually for him, this work responded to a political issue – the testing of nuclear weapons in the Pacific.

The Protest Works includes a series of etchings created by Drawbridge in 1966 and closely related to his raked oil paintings of the early 1960s. Here Drawbridge creates a series of raked lines that flow around, under and over each other, a satisfying visual equivalent of the movement of the wind through the air, and a perfect matching of process, media and subject. Also featured are a small number of prints by both John Drawbridge and his then wife, Tanya Ashken (Sculptor & Jeweller), expressing their objection to whaling in the Pacific.

Other works in the show include a variety of works by Drawbridge (paintings, drawings and mezzotints) and Ashken (sculpture).

ENJOY!