Christine Hellyar - MIXED MEDIA

+64 021.453.418:: thelab@fe29.com

Whisk Whip VII (2015)
Hibiscus & coconut plaiting
with copper coated wood fungi
1100 x 500 mm
CH Whisk Whip VII Wood Fungi 1100 x 500mm a
Whisk Whip V (2015)
Hibiscus & coconut plaiting
with bronze Pikopiko ferns
1100 x 250mm
CH Whisk Whip Piko Piko 1100 x 250mm a
Flirty Fan III (2015)
Copper coated wood fungi
with feathers & beads
250 x 320 x 115 mm
200908 Flirty Fan 3g
Proud Paddlers - group (2015)
Wood, stone (Schist), copper
leather & silk
Up to 550 x 300 mm ea
Paddle 6 group
Proud Paddler III (2015)
Wood, stone (Schist), copper
leather & silk
500 x 300 mm
Paddle 3c
Proud Paddler VIII (2015)
Wood, stone (Schist), copper
leather & silk
510 x 300 mm
Paddle 8c
Claims - group (2015)
6 works containing over 2000 signed paintings
representing a lifetime's work (the artist has
completed 2199 works to date)
200910 Claims group 2
Claims I (2020)
Paper, ink, paint & ribbons
750 mm
200908 Claims I
Claims VI (2020)
Paper, ink, paint & ribbons
660 mm
200908 Claims VI
Perky Pens III (2015)
Paper, card, feathers & steel
810 mm
200908 Perky Pens 3
Henna (2018)
Dye on cotton, hibiscus & ti koura
in wood & glass display box
450 x 600 mm
Henna with cotton, hibiscus & Ti Kouka 450 x 600 a
Fuchsia (2018)
Dye on bamboo, coconut & jute
in wood & glass display box
450 x 600 mm
Fuchsia with bamboo, coconut & jute 450 x 600 d
Bracken (2018)
Dye on bamboo & hibiscus
in wood & glass display box
450 x 600 mm
Bracken with bamboo and hibiscus 450 x 600 new
Woad (2018)
Dye on bamboo, hibiscus & linen
in wood & glass display box
450 x 600 mm
Woad with bamboo, hibiscus & linen 450 x 600 new

Christine Hellyar was born in 1947 in New Plymouth. She completed a Diploma in Fine Arts (Hons) at the Elam School of Art in 1970. Working in both sculpture and installation, Hellyar’s work incorporates a wide range of materials, from found natural items such as grass and stones, to clay, fabric and plaster, latex, lead and bronze for casting.

Over the years, consistent themes in Hellyar’s work have included ‘her celebration of the environment, her interest in people’s interaction with nature, the validation of the domestic and a questioning of traditional gender roles’.

In 1981, Hellyar took up a part-time teaching position at Elam, School of Fine Arts, University of Auckland where she remained until 1996, when she left to work full time in her studio. During this time, she was awarded the first Adam Award for her significant contribution to New Zealand Art. This afforded her the opportunity to complete her first large outdoor bronzes.

Hellyar won the Department of Conservation residency (Mount Taranaki) in 2003 and in 2005 she participated in the Tylee Cottage Residency at Whanganui’s Sarjeant Gallery. In 2009 she won the McConnell Properties Stoneleigh Sculpture Award and in 2011 she was the resident botanic artist at the Auckland Botanic Gardens.

Exhibiting consistently in New Zealand and internationally since the 1970s, Hellyar’s work has been included in major exhibitions including the 1982 Biennale of SydneyWhen Art Hits The Headlines (National Art Gallery, Wellington 1987); NZXI (Auckland City Art Gallery, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, and Contemporary Art Institute, Brisbane, 1988); Three from NZ (Long Beach Museum of Art, Los Angeles, 1990); Headlands (MCA, Sydney, 1992); and Treasures of the Underworld (New Zealand Pavilion at the 1992 Seville Expo, Amsterdam and various New Zealand venues, 1992 to 1994).

Hellyar’s work is held in most New Zealand public collections, including the Auckland Art Gallery, Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and the Christchurch Art Gallery. She was an active member of the New Zealand Society of Sculptors and Painters and is now an active member of “Outdoor Sculpture 2001” which celebrated the new millennium by installing eight new permanent sculptures in the Auckland Domain.

In a career spanning 50 years, with shows in Australia, the USA, England, Holland, Spain, Hungary, Japan, Korea and Singapore, Hellyar has made and exhibited over 750 sculptures, 15 large installations and countless paintings, drawings and photographs. She now works mainly in fibre for indoor sculpture, and bronze for outdoor sculpture. Her 2D work is in a wide range of media.