METAMORPHOSIS - Historical works on canvas by Philippa Blair

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220813 PB Metamorphosis Exhibition Home Page a
Tarawera Cloak (1984)
Acrylic on canvas with bamboo
1800 x 1780mm
Tarawera Cloak 1984 acrylic on canvas and bamboo 1800 x 1780
Tarawera Cloak in the front window
of the Shippee gallery, New York (1984)
Shippee Gallery Front Window 1984
Canberra Cloak (1984)
Acrylic on canvas with bamboo
1630 x 1600mm

(3 hanging options shown)
Canberra Cloak 1984 acrylic on canvas and bamboo 1630 x 1600 new
Indian Summer Cloak (1993)
Acrylic on canvas with bamboo
1500 x 1500mm

(detail - left, one hanging option - right)
Indian Summer 1993 acrylic,canvas,bamboosticks 1500 x 1500 NEW
New Year Book (1996)
Acrylic on canvas
1050 x 1440mm

(detail - left, 1 hanging option - right)
New Year Jan Book 1996 1050 x 1440
Island Indian Ocean (1991)
Acrylic on canvas
920 x 1680mm

(2 hanging options shown)
Island Indian Ocean) 1991 1680 x 920 NEW
Island Shrine / 7 Days in Mauritius (1991)
Acrylic on canvas
920 x 1680mm

(2 hanging options shown)
Island Shrine (7 days in Mauitius) 1991 1680 x 920 NEW
Island Shrine in '7 Days in Mauritius' exhibition
in Janne Land Gallery (1992)
Island Shrine (7 days in Mauitius) 1991 in Janne Land Gallery
Spot The Giraffe (1991)
Acrylic on canvas
1140 x 1650mm

(detail - left, 1 hanging option - right)
Spot the Giraffe Book 1991 canvas,acrylic 1650 x 1140 approx NEW
Black Book of Hours (1991)
Acrylic on canvas
1030 x 1400mm

(detail - left, 1 hanging option - right)
Black Book of Hours 1991,2030 x1400m $14,500 NEW
New Year Jan Book (1992)
Acrylic on canvas
1220 x 915mm

(detail - left, 1 hanging option - right)
New Year Jan Book 1992 1220 x 915 NEW
Reef Calendar ( )
Acrylic on canvas
? x ? mm

(detail - left, 2 hanging options - right)
Reef Calendar NEW
A number of the works were included in a solo
show at the Shippee Gallery, NY (1984) as part of
NEW ZEALAND ART IN AMERICA, an event involving
some 17 artists showing in 15 galleries throughout NYC.
New Zealand Artists in America
Other works

Long interested in breaking down the traditional barriers of art making, and in the literal and symbolic idea of metamorphosis, Philippa Blair spent many years exploring the possibilities of unstretched, folded and hanging canvas, unrestrained by the limitations of the frame. She saw the changing states as a metaphor for life.

Blair’s trademark works of the 1970s-90s were canvas cloaks, teepees, and books. Blurring the line between 2D and 3D, these theatrical works reference her love of sculpture. Bamboo sticks extend the works beyond the wall, bringing them to life as if in a dance. The sticks are painted black and white, in part a reference to the porcupine quills sacred to many Native Americans. Long attracted to indigenous cultures, Blair’s appropriation of the teepee motif (a symbol for nomadic structure) fitted well with her ideas about paintings that could be moved and shaped.

Metamorphosis includes several of Blair’s cloak paintings created during the early 1980s and exhibited in a solo exhibition at the Shippee Gallery, New York in 1984, as part of NEW ZEALAND ART IN AMERICA. The event, sponsored by The New Zealand – United States Arts Foundation and curated by Mary Evangelista, involved some 17 artists (Billy Apple, Len Lye,  Ralph Hotere and Gretchen Albrecht to name just a few) showing in 14 art galleries throughout New York City. The event was timed to coincide with the opening of Te Maori, a watershed exhibition of Māori art, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC.

Holding evidence of journeys both physical and artistic, the wrapping of unstretched canvas into the form of a cloak (a recognised symbol of status and mana in many indigenous cultures) implies the imagined presence of a body.

Hanging alongside her cloaks are a number of Blair’s ‘books’ from the 1990s. Many have an implied symmetry with a central vertical spine, while others comprise unbound ‘pages’, inviting personal interpretation when hanging. Pages can be viewed alone as individual works or chapters, or together as events that fold over and into one another, revealing traces of the past alongside glimpses into the future.

The flow of the paint on these heavy canvas pieces is given form by the boundaries of line, fold, overlap, or edge. All works are reversible, hand-stitched in linen thread and eyeletted – “exhausting work now I think of it” Blair recounts as she reflects on the creation of the works she holds dear. Confronting the viewer with their physical scale and boldness of execution, the seemingly endless options for hanging leaves a sense there is always more to reveal – a metaphor perhaps for Blair’s artistic and personal journey.