LAYLA WALTER

Page 1

L AYL A WALTER Conversations 14 Nov - 9 Dec 20 1 5 www.milfordgalleries.co.nz

milford galleries queenstown

9A Earl Street (03) 442 6896 qtown@milfordgalleries.co.nz



Woven Rimmed Vase #12 (2015) cast glass, size (h x ø): 330 x 190 mm

1



Small Woven Bowl #8 (2015) cast glass, size (h x ø): 90 x 255 mm

2



Pohutukawa - Cape Colville #1 (2015) cast glass, size (h x ø): 290 x 165 mm

3



Saddleback - Tiritiri Matangi #1 (2015) cast glass, size (h x ø): 250 x 330 mm

4



Pohutukawa - Cape Colville #2 (Karekare) (2015) cast glass, size (h x ø): 290 x 165 mm

5



Open Bowl - Woven Interior #30 (2015) cast glass, size (h x ø): 145 x 245 mm

6



Kokako #10 (2015) cast glass, size (h x ø): 240 x 330 mm

7



Woven Rimmed Bowl #25 (2015) cast glass, size (h x ø): 90 x 345 mm

8



Open Bowl - Woven Interior #31 (2015) cast glass, size (h x ø): 140 x 245 mm

9



Woven Zig-Zag Bowl #4 (2015) cast glass, size (h x ø): 95 x 285 mm

10



Black Robin #20 (2015) cast glass, size (h x ø): 120 x 125 mm

11



Kowhai - Coromandel Gold #1 (2015) cast glass, size (h x ø): 120 x 125 mm

12



Tui for Geoff #45 (2015) cast glass, size (h x ø): 120 x 125 mm

13



Tui for Geoff #44 (2015) cast glass, size (h x ø): 120 x 125 mm

14



Tui for Geoff #42 (2015) cast glass, size (h x ø): 120 x 125 mm

15


This is a New Zealand show. Layla Walter’s interest in native flora, fauna and customary weaving practices of Maori has informed her practice from her early years. Glass is her medium. It’s not easy to interpret such themes through lost wax casting, but Walter has been working in glass casting for over twenty years. This exhibition reveals the outcome of a skilled and informed practice. Glass is a bold medium, where colours glow and shapes are crisp; the material enhances the play of shadows through and around each work. The apparent simplicity Walter conveys through each vessel belies the complexity and unforgiving nature of the ten stage process of lost wax casting where negative renderings emerge into the final positive form. Growing up in a creative world within the Coromandel, Walter learnt easily through her hands. Learning from local artists and craftspeople, and then immersing herself in the Diploma of Applied Arts followed by Bachelor in Design, Unitec (under Elizabeth McClure) brought her into contact with the ancient lost wax process. International glass artist Ann Robinson guided her too. This show considers Walter’s practice through 21 years of design, although all works were cast in 2015. Themes of native birds, plants and flax weaving, gently guide the viewer through that passage of time. Kokako vessel designed in 2008 is a beguiling work. It was inspired by visits to Tiritiri Matangi, the wild life sanctuary. The shadowy form of the Kokako bird glows through the quiet tones of the blue-grey glass, the line of the bird echoed through the shape of the vessel. The woven rimmed bowls, first designed in 1994, draw on Walter’s interest in customary Maori weaving practices, learnt as a child in the weaving house at Otatara Trust, Hawkes Bay. Refined through the guidance of Kahu Te Kanawa, Walter draws on the niho taniwha pattern used in taniko weaving and tukutuku panels. The saw-edged pattern, symbolising the teeth of the taniwha, is clearly articulated. Cross –cultural discussions emerge within her practice that considers how national identities play out within design and craft. Layla Walter works within the environment of New Zealand; she is a glass artist first and foremost. Justine Olsen Curator of Decorative art and design Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa


EXHIBITION PRICELIST 1

Woven Rimmed Vase #12 (2015)

7,000

2

Small Woven Bowl #8 (2015)

6,800

3

Pohutukawa - Cape Colville #1 (2015)

6,000

4

Saddleback - Tiritiri Matangi #1 (2015)

9,500

5

Pohutukawa - Cape Colville #2 (Karekare) (2015)

6,000

6

Open Bowl - Woven Interior #30 (2015)

6,000

7

Kokako #10 (2015)

9,500

8

Woven Rimmed Bowl #25 (2015)

9

Open Bowl - Woven Interior #31 (2015)

6,000

10

Woven Zig-Zag Bowl #4 (2015)

7,500

11

Black Robin #20 (2015)

2,500

12

Kowhai - Coromandel Gold #1 (2015)

2,500

13

Tui for Geoff #45 (2015)

2,500

14

Tui for Geoff #44 (2015)

2,500

15

Tui for Geoff #42 (2015)

2,500

11,000

All prices are NZD and include GST; Prices are current at the time of the exhibition


LAYLA WALTER b. 1975, lives Auckland

Layla Walter: Saddleback - Tiritiri Matangi #1 (2015)

"There is a visual balance between finely crafted detail and unadorned surface. Blossoms, stems and buds branch across simple forms, dignified and exposed. It is my intention that each work is peacefully engaging." – Layla Walter (1) Layla Walter is a New Zealand glass artist and maker who has gained significant recognition for her distinctive and individual works in cast glass. A specialist in the "lost wax" technique, Layla Walter creates glass work featuring intricate flowers, stems and buds carved into the surface of vessels. Her works are significant because of the individuality of language, the personality of voice, the clear location of place to New Zealand and the South Pacific and "the sophisticated patient crafting they display" (2) Walter worked for leading cast glass artist Ann Robinson from 1996 to 2011. In 1998 she graduated from Unitec in Auckland with a Bachelor of Applied Arts (Glass). In 2001, she received the AMP Achievers Award which allowed her to travel to the United States to further her glass studies. In the same year she received the Pilchuck Saxe Award, and was given a teaching assistant position at Pilchuck Glass School in the United States. In 2007, Walter received an invitation to present at the Glass Art Society in the United States and in 2008 was awarded the Creative Excellence Prize at the Molly Morpeth Canaday 3D Awards. More recently Walter was awarded for Black Robin at The Trust Art and Sculpture Awards (2014). She exhibits internationally, as well as throughout New Zealand. Her work appears in many private and public collections, most notably the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Auckland Museum, Ebltoft Museum, Denmark, Sir Elton John’s private collection, and in many NZ embassies worldwide as part of the collection of the New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs. (3) Layla Walter's work has been noted in the influential annual National Business Review of New Zealand Art as worthy of investment. In a rare achievement, her glass has been selected on six separate occasions for the Corning Museum of Glass - New Glass Review, where thousands of artists apply for inclusion in a specially selected annual list of only 100 artists, whose are at the leading edge of current and relevant glass practice today (1997, 1999, 2005, 2009, 2012 and 2014). She was included as one of only two object makers in Richard Wolfe's curated exhibition Our People - Our Land alongside a wealth of premier New Zealand artists including C.F. Goldie, Sir Peter Siddell, Graham Sydney, Terry Stringer, Michael Smither, Nigel Brown, Karl Maughan and Ray Ching. (4) 1. 2. 3. 4.

Layla Walter, Bio, 2015, retrieved from http://www.laylawalter.com/bio. Helen Schamroth, Layla Walter I SOLO 2002, Masterworks Solo Exhibition Brochure, 2002. Layla Walter, Bio, 2015, retrieved from http://www.laylawalter.com/bio. Ibid.

Layla Walter 2015 CV P a g e |1

milford

galleries queenstown

www.milfordgalleries.co.nz


LAYLA WALTER b. 1975, lives Auckland EDUCATION 1998 1995

Bachelor of Design 3D-Glass. Unitec Institute of Technology, Auckland, NZ Introduction to Maori Fibre Weaving, UIT, NZ

SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2015 2014 2010 2008 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2000 1998 1996

Conversations, milford galleries queenstown Pacific Light, Avid Gallery, Wellington Pacific Flower, Corbans Art Estate, Auckland Second Harvest, William Traver Gallery, Seattle, USA Harvest, AVID Gallery, Wellington Blue Bird, Anna Bibby Gallery, Auckland Camellia, William Traver Gallery, Seattle, USA Flower, William Traver Gallery, Seattle, USA Water Lily, AVID Gallery, Wellington Layla Walter, Anna Bibby Gallery, Auckland Woven Vessel, William Traver Gallery, Seattle, USA Layla Walter, Masterworks Gallery, Auckland Thread Line, AVID Gallery, Wellington Graduation Show, The Gully Lounge, Auckland Solo Sponsorship Show, Auckland

SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS 2015

2014

2013

2011

2010

2009

2008

2007

2006

2005

MIG + Layla Walter, Allpress Gallery, Auckland Encounter, New Zealand Design and Decorative Arts Permanent collection, Auckland Museum Bird Show, The Vivian, Matakana Spring Catalogue, milford galleries queenstown The Nature of Things, Avid Gallery, Wellington The Review, milford galleries queenstown Value, Masterworks Gallery, Auckland Show, William Traver Gallery, Seattle, USA Stanley Palmer & Layla Walter, Melanie Roger, Auckland Familiar, Avid Gallery, Wellington The Nature of Things, Schack Art Center, Everett, Washington, USA Kirsty Gorman, Peter Peryer and Layla Walter, Melanie Roger Gallery, Auckland William Traver Artist Show, GAS, Portland, USA Group Exhibition, Anna Bibby Gallery, Auckland Richmond Rd Studio, Piece Gallery, Matakana Putiputi, the Flower in Contemporary New Zealand Art, Hastings City Art Gallery Glass, Ann Robinson, Michael Crawford and Layla Walter, BlackBarn Gallery, Napier Inspiration, William Traver Gallery, Seattle, USA Luminaries, Sabbia Gallery, Sydney, Australia Small Works, AVID Gallery, Wellington Group Show, Anna Bibby Gallery, Auckland Richmond Road Glass, Form Gallery, Christchurch A Model Assembly, Artis Gallery, Auckland Group Show, Anna Bibby Gallery, Auckland An Exhibition of Work Utilising Light, Artis Gallery, Auckland The Gift Exchange, Dowse Art Museum, Lower Hutt 25th Annual Arts & Crafts Exhibition, Ron Sang Gallery, Auckland Vessel, Masterworks Gallery, Auckland Wild Things, Masterworks Gallery, Auckland Glass, Anna Bibby Gallery, Auckland Contemporary Glass, Masterworks Gallery, Auckland International Glass Exhibition, The Laura Russo Gallery, Portland, USA A Matter of Substance - NZ Glass, Kensington Gallery, Adelaide, Australia

Layla Walter 2015 CV P a g e |2

milford

galleries queenstown

www.milfordgalleries.co.nz


2004

2003

2002

2001

2000 1999

1998

New Zealand Glass, Masterworks Gallery, Auckland Southern Exposure, Ebeltoft, Denmark; Sargent Gallery, Wanganui; Objectspace, Auckland Woven Image, AVID Gallery, Wellington Small and Precious, Masterworks Gallery, Auckland Ranges of Inspiration II, Corbans Art Estate, Auckland Fibre to Fairy Lights – Contemporary Responses to Kete Maori, Dowse Art Museum, Lower Hutt Glass Invitational NZ, touring exhibition, Milford Galleries Dunedin (8 November 2002 - 16 January 2003); Pataka - Porirua Museum of Arts & Cultures (23 February - 4 May 2003) & Rotorua Museum of Art & History (16 May - 17 August 2003) NZ Glass, Anna Bibby Gallery, Auckland Red Black White, Anna Bibby Gallery, Auckland Southern Lights, AVID Gallery, Wellington The Cast, touring exhibition, Lopdell House Gallery, Auckland; Sargeant Gallery, Wanganui; Whangarei Art Museum, Whangarei; Hawkes Bay Exhibition Centre, Hastings Lindsay Patterson, Jo Nuttall and Layla Walter, Masterworks Gallery, Auckland New Artists New Work, William Traver Gallery, Seattle, USA NZ Glass, Masterworks Gallery, Auckland A Survey of New Zealand Glass, Masterworks Gallery, Auckland Emerging NZ Glass, Parliment House, Wellington The Best of New Zealand Glass AXIA Modern Art, Melbourne, Australia Emerging NZ Glass, AVID Gallery, Wellington Norsewear Art Award Exhibition, Waipukurau Royal Easter Show Glass Award Exhibition, Auckland RFC Glass Prize Exhibition, Australia-wide

SELECTED AWARDS 2014 2008 2001

Second Prize, The Trusts Art & Sculpture Awards Creative Excellence Prize, Molly Morpeth Canaday 3D Awards Pilchuck Saxe Award, USA AMP Achievers Award Pilchuck Glass School 1/2 Scholarship to attend Harumi Yukutake’s workshop Merit, Norsewear Ceramics and Glass Award Merit, Royal Easter Show Glass Award West Auckland Federated Women’s Association Award Unitec Institute of Technology Student Scholarship

1999 1998 1996 1995

SELECTED COLLECTIONS Auckland Museum, Auckland Department of Foreign Affairs, NZ Embassies in Washington, USA; Tehran, Iran; Cairo, Egypt; Wellington Glasmuseet Ebletoft, Ebletoft, Denmark Te Papa Tongarewa, Museum of New Zealand, Wellington St Cuthbert's College, Auckland Sir Elton John, UK Wingnut Films, Fran Walsh and Peter Jackson

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY 2014 2012 2009 2005

2006 2004

2003 2002

New Glass Review 35, The Corning Museum of Glass, New York, USA New Glass Review 33, The Corning Museum of Glass, New York, USA New Glass Review 30, The Corning Museum of Glass, New York, USA Bucknell, Carol, ‘Inspired by Nature’, Next Magazine, December 2009, pp. 76-79 Ioannou, Noris, ‘Art Glass Breaking Ground’, The Advertiser (Adelaide, Australia), 9 May 2005, text and illus, pp 85 New Glass Review 26, The Corning Museum of Glass, New York, USA p60 Le Vaillant, Louie, ‘A Good Eye,’ Metro Magazine, June 2006 Southern Exposure Catalogue, Glasmuseet Ebletoft, text and illus p 62-63 Wong, Gilbert, ‘Art of Glass,’ Metro Magazine, September 2004 Newton, Katie, ‘Next Big Thing,’ Sunday Star Times, 12 September 2004 MacLellan, Sarah, Glass Act, Pavement, April/May 2003, p30 Lyndsay Swan, ‘Air New Zealand Panorama, October 2002

Layla Walter 2015 CV P a g e |3

milford

galleries queenstown

www.milfordgalleries.co.nz


2001 2000 1999 1997

Elliott, Moyra, ‘New Zealand Cast Glass 2001’, Object, (Australia) Craft Arts International 49 (Australia) article by Gerry King, pp70-71 New Zealand Contemporary Cast Class, ‘The Cast,’ November 2001, p 13, 41 & 43 New Glass Review 20, The Corning Museum of Glass, New York, USA, p102, 107 New Glass Review 18, The Corning Museum of Glass, New York, USA, p 98

Layla Walter 2015 CV P a g e |4

milford

galleries queenstown

www.milfordgalleries.co.nz


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