TE RRY STRINGE R
Growing in the 1960s and other sto r ies...
30 May - 24 Jun 2015 www.milfordgalleries.co.nz
milford galleries queenstown
9A Earl Street (03) 442 6896 qtown@milfordgalleries.co.nz
We Are Shaped by Our Childhoods (2015) cast bronze, edition of 2, height: 1610 mm
1
Roman Peepshow (2015) cast bronze, edition of 2, height: 910 mm
2
Woman Between Past and Future (2015) cast bronze, edition of 2, height: 2350 mm
3
Growing in the 1960s (2014) cast bronze, edition of 3, height: 535 mm
4
Venus and Cupid (2012) cast bronze, edition of 3, height: 1810 mm
3
4
Reliquary Head (2014) cast bronze, edition of 2, height: 500 mm
We Are Shaped by Our Childhoods (2015) cast bronze, edition of 6, height: 500 mm
5
Young Siddhartha (2015) cast bronze, edition of 2, height: 405 mm
6
Rose Lamp (1998) cast bronze, edition of 100, height: 120 mm
9
Terry Stringer has a deserved reputation for his bold, chimeric forms. One of the country's leading sculptors, he has created large, high-profile public bronzes, but is equally at home with more intimate domestic works, such as those in his current exhibition. Stringer mines his own past and memories of classical art with his soft, trompe l'oeil bronzes. The human figure remains at the centre, but in these works the sculptural form is directly challenged; the balanced upright form is holed and altered, becoming S shaped and spiraled. (1) In this display, Stringer's trademark illusions remain intact, and there is still a whimsical play with figure and ground. But there is also a more sombre, wistful edge here to several of the artist's warm illusory forms which has not always been evident to this extent in Stringer's art. The pieces are both formal ideas and narrative pieces, dealing with human relationships. Reliquary Head, for example, presents a woman's head "as a frame for the cut-out outline of a man. He is the missing figure in her memory, which has [Stringer] treating the head as if it were a religious container for a memento." (2) Several of the pieces suggest the cycle of nature, of maturing, growing from childhood to adulthood, and a sense of loss through this growth. In works such as We are Shaped by Our Childhoods, with its girl and woman figures, this narrative is spelt out as "hands shaping the young person into the older one". (3) With Woman Between Past and Future we see the morphed forms of girl and woman, again suggesting the passage of time and road to maturity, but is this the same woman as child and adult, or the mother and daughter? The ambiguity of the title can be read either way. With Venus and Cupid, the sculptor's homage to the 15th century master Botticelli's The Birth of Venus, the latter possibility is suggested. Here too, there is the linking of the child and the woman, but in this work the Roman goddess transforms into a semblance of the Christian icon of Madonna and Child. In other works, the cycle of nature is more subtly implied. The oldest work in the show, the lovely Rose Lamp, takes context from the surrounding pieces to become a threedimensional vanitas image. The interior light casts the form of a face, the juxtaposition of face and flower implying the ephemeral nature of beauty. 1, 2, 3. Artist's statement
EXHIBITION PRICELIST 1
We Are Shaped by Our Childhoods (2015), edition of 2
48,000
2
Roman Peepshow (2015), edition of 2
25,000
3
Woman Between Past and Future (2014), edition of 2
45,000
4
Growing in the 1960s (2014), edition of 3
5
Venus and Cupid (2012), edition of 3
6
Reliquary Head (2014), edition of 2
6,800
7
We Are Shaped by Our Childhoods (2015), edition of 6
3,600
8
Young Siddhartha (2015), edition of 2
8,500
9
Rose Lamp (1998), edition of 100
1,800
7,500
34,000
All prices are NZD and include GST; Prices are current at the time of the exhibition
TERRY STRINGER b. 1946, lives Auckland
Terry Stringer: Venus and Cupid (2012)
“When I was young I would stare at sepia photographs of classical art in an encyclopedia…. So ‘Great Art’ reached down to me in New Zealand. This is the past that my sculpture remembers. We are all made whole out of the parts of our childhoods… I seek to tell my story in fragments.” (1) “What we are shown is a moment taken from the world. Art turns a fragment around and reflects it back. But it is only a fragment. Much is edited. …The rest is masked off…So we can look at a bronze face that is looking back at us. And we look through the mask and the mirror.” (2) “He moulds sensuous forms out of clay, smoothly blending the rhythms of curves into graceful flowing outlines and harmonious counterpoint, which is then fixed in bronze.” (3) The softness of the wax patina finish, the perspective plays and dimensionality contrasts are fundamental to Stringer “consciously testing the dividing line between the real and the illusory, and challenging the nature of ‘sculpture’, ‘painting’, ‘drawing’, and ‘architecture’.” (4) “A quirk in his eyesight means he finds it hard to judge depth. He sees everything very flatly: “I have to deduce depth logically, from visual clues.” This aberration, this twist in the way he sees things, becomes a trigger for his art.”(5) In the 1980s he “emerged as one of New Zealand’s best figurative sculptors. He doesn’t break rules, he transforms them. Weight-shifter, shape-shifter, he sets the scene… His tricks of perception have become a phenomenological game for one player: you the observer in an uncertain universe. His sculptures flick in and out of focus. To get the best out of them, you have to move around them.” (6) Stringer "lives and works at his home and sculpture park Zealandia at Mahurangi, north of Auckland. Like his sculpture, the house combines the illusionist devices of the stage with a constant interplay between reality and illusion. The house contains an exhibition room but most of the sculptures are located around the house and in the walled court."(7) Born 1946 in Cornwall, England, Stringer graduated with a Diploma of Fine Arts from Elam School of Fine Arts, University of Auckland, in 1967. He has exhibited extensively since 1971 and received numerous commissions and awards. He is represented in all major public and many private New Zealand collections. Amongst his public commissions are his Aotea Square Water Sculpture, Auckland 1979; Grand Head, Wellington 1987; Risen Christ, Cathedral Square, Christchurch 1999/2000; and New Market, Auckland in 2006. 1. Artists Statement accompanying ‘Personal Museum’ exhibition, 1998. 2. Terry Stringer in Terry Stringer & Witi Ihimaera, ‘Mask & Mirror An Artist’s Book’, Iwa/Poi, Auckland, 1994. 3. David Eggleton, ‘Shape Shifter, Sculptor Terry Stringer makes works of ambiguous beauty’, Listener, 3 October 1998. 4. Priscilla Pitts, ‘Contemporary New Zealand Sculpture: Themes and Issues’, David Bateman Ltd, Auckland, 1998. 5. David Eggleton, ibid. 6. David Eggleton, ibid. 7. John Daly-Peoples, ‘Zealandia waives architectural rules of sculpture’, The National Business Review, 27 October 2000.
Terry Stringer 2015 CV P a g e |1
milford galleries queenstown
www.milfordgalleries.co.nz
TERRY STRINGER b. 1946, lives Auckland EDUCATION 1967
Diploma of Fine Arts, Elam School of Fine Arts, University of Auckland
SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2015 2014 2013 2011 2010 2009 2008 2006
2005 2004 2003 2002
2001
1999 1998
1996 1994 1989 1986 1982
1981
1978
Growing up in the 1960s and Other Stories, milford galleries Queenstown Lois Whites's Manikin and Other Stories, Brooke Gifford Gallery, Christchurch Landscape of the Head, Tauranga Art Gallery, Tauranga Looking Back and Other Stories, Robin Gibson Gallery, Sydney Australia Face / Space, Pataka Art + Museum, Porirua Transfigured Heads, The Pah Homestead, TSB Wallace Arts Centre, Auckland Figure & Ground, Robin Gibson Gallery, Sydney, Australia Figure in a Landscape, Beppu Wiarda Gallery, Portland, USA A Secret Room in the Head, Koru Contemporary Art, Hong Kong Figure in a Landscape, Brooke Gifford Gallery, Christchurch Head Room, Robin Gibson Gallery, Sydney, Australia Head Room, Beppu Wiarda Gallery, Portland, USA About Face, Black Barn Gallery, Hawkes Bay A Life in Sculpture, Webbs, Auckland Our Home is Our Childhood, Robin Gibson Gallery, Sydney, Australia Our Home is Our Childhood, Beppu Wiarda Gallery, Portland, USA The Head is a Theatre of Dreams, Mark Woolley Gallery, Portland, USA The Architecture of Memory, Brooke Gifford Gallery, Christchurch Going Home, Milford Galleries Dunedin The Privileged Eye, Robin Gibson Gallery, Sydney, Australia A Little Theatre Work for the Hands, Robin Gibson Gallery, Sydney, Australia A Little Theatre Work for the Hands, Simmons Gallery, London, UK A Little Theatre Work for the Hands, Janna Land Gallery, Wellington Living in my Head, Te Tuhi – The Mark, Auckland A Temple in the Head, Milford Galleries Dunedin The Palace of the Mind, Brooke Gifford Gallery, Christchurch; FHE Gallery, Auckland Behind the Studio Screen, Janne Land Gallery, Wellington Hidden Image, Milford Galleries Dunedin Personal Museum, Bishop Suter Gallery, Nelson Personal Museum, Hawkes Bay Exhibition Centre, Napier All We Are One Body, Anna Bibby Gallery, Auckland Hawkes Bay Museum, Napier Figures in a Landscape, Fisher Gallery, Auckland Aspects of Recent NZ Art, Sculpture 1, Auckland City Art Gallery, Auckland Wrap Around Sculpture, National Art Gallery, Wellington Seen, Denis Cohn Gallery, Auckland Ankrum Galleries, Los Angeles, USA Recent Works, Rotorua City Gallery, Rotorua Living Room, Manawatu Art Gallery, Palmerston North Living Room, Sarjeant Gallery, Wanganui Living Room, Dowse Art Gallery, Lower Hutt Bronzes and Painted Wooden Sculpture, Waikato Art Museum, Hamilton
SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS 2015 2014 2012
Royal Queenstown Easter Show, milford galleries Queenstown Significant Works, Milford Galleries Dunedin Significant Works, Milford Galleries Dunedin The Clipboard Show, Robin Gibson Gallery, Sydney Australia Sculpture 24, Robin Gibson Gallery, Sydney Australia
Terry Stringer 2015 CV P a g e |2
milford galleries queenstown
www.milfordgalleries.co.nz
2011-2012 Sculpture in the Gardens, Auckland Botanic Gardens, Auckland 2011 Black Bronzes + Blue Objects, Thermostat Art Gallery, Palmerston North Sculpture 23, Robin Gibson Gallery, Sydney Australia Lust, Brenda May Gallery Sydney, Australia 2010 The Naked and the Nude, Christchurch Art Gallery, Christchurch 2009 Sculpture by the Sea, Bondi, Australia Small is the New Big, Robin Gibson Gallery, Sydney Australia 2007 Body Works, Robin Gibson Gallery, Sydney Australia 2006 Shapeshifter, New Zealand International Arts Festival, Wellington 2005 Sculpture on the Gulf, Waiheke Island, Auckland Summer Exhibition, Royal Academy of Art, London, UK 2004 Shapeshifter, New Zealand International Arts Festival, Wellington 2003 Connectedness, Hawkes Bay Museum, Napier 2002 Pacific Rim, Simmons Gallery, London, UK 2001 Pacific Rim, McPherson Gallery, Auckland 1999 The Shrine, Lopdell House Gallery, Auckland (and tour) Volume and Form, Singapore Face to Face, Auckland City Art Gallery, Auckland 1998 (Re)visioning the Real, Lopdell House Gallery, Auckland (and tour) 1995 The Persuasion of the Real, Hawkes Bay Museum, Napier (and tour) 1994 Little Jewels, Arts Marketing Board, Wellington 1991 Inheritance, Wellington City Art Gallery, Wellington 1990 Medallions 90, 22nd Congress of International Medal Art, Helsinki, Finland 1981 Recent Acquisitions, New Zealand Art, Auckland City Art Gallery 1978 Mildura Sculpture Triennial, Mildura, Australia
SELECTED COMMISSIONS 2013 2011 2010 2010 2006 2005 2003 1999 1991 1988 1987 1979
Sacred Heart College, Auckland Nelson City Gateway Sculpture Commission The Art of Sculpture, Campbell Parade, Bondi, Sydney, Australia Mountain Fountain, The Cathedral of the Holy Trinity, Parnell, Auckland Body Language, Palmerston North Public Sculpture Trust The World Grasped, Newmarket, Auckland The Kawau Thinks of Queen Victoria, Selwyn College, Auckland The Fates, Peter Craze Memorial, Ealing, London, UK Faith, Hope, and Love, St Cuthbert’s College, Auckland Risen Christ, Cathedral Square, Christchurch Kiri Te Kanawa, Aotea Centre, Auckland White Lightening, Tutanekai Mall, Rotorua Grand Head, Victoria Street, Wellington Aotea Square Water Sculpture, Auckland
AWARDS 2003 2000 1977
ONZM for services to sculpture, New Years Honours list Portrait Sculpture Award, New Zealand Portrait Gallery, Wellington QE II Arts Council Awards
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY 2013
2010 2006 1999 1998 1996 1994
Stocker, Mark, ‘The Many Faces of Terry Stringer’, The Medal, No 63, 2013 Stocker, Mark, ‘Late Bronze Age Figure: A Conversation with Terry Stringer’, Art New Zealand, No 145, Autumn 2013 Terry Stringer: A Secret Room in the Head, catalogue, Koru Contemporary Art, Hong Kong Daly-Peoples, John, ‘Auckland Outside Art’, National Business Review, 5 May 2006 Woodward, Robin, ‘The Artist’s Hand and Eye’, Art New Zealand, No 89, Summer 1998-1999 Eggleton, David, ‘Shape Shifter’, Listener, 3 October, 1998 Brown, Warwick, Another 100 New Zealand Artists, Godwit, Auckland Ihimaera, Witi and Terry Stringer, Mask and Mirror, catalogue, IWA/POI, Auckland
Terry Stringer 2015 CV P a g e |3
milford galleries queenstown
www.milfordgalleries.co.nz