Days 2 & 3 Waiheke Arts Festival

Day 2 Winter Arts Festival

I’m being environmental today, car sharing with my neighbour Sue and I’ve got the job of navigating. She says with an ironical twinkle in her eye that it’s because men are better at map reading, but I think it’s more likely to be that she is driving.

My Entry Badge matches my outfit
My Entry Badge matches my outfit

We re-pin our hand made tickets to ourselves and set out to find Mary James in Ostend.  The wrong address is printed on the brochure but by continuing over the hill, the tell-tall red ball on a stick comes into view.  Mary has a brand new portacabin facing the road.  There’s a blue planter at the door with a vibrant blue flower itching to be painted.  Sure enough, inside is the beginning of such a work.  Her Nikau palm in particular caught my eye. In Surfdale we find Miranda Hawthorn and her collection of sea-birds and other animals.  I’d seen her work at the Red Shed last year and enjoyed her sense of humour – Gulls fighting over a $100 note or a Faberge Egg.  Sue wanted to know about the water-based oil paints she uses and came away with a list of useful colours to start off with.  Across the Island is Penny Ericson, looking over Palm Beach from a spectacular house and garden that apparently goes all the way down to the sea.  Her speciality is ceramic row-boats with a set of oars and Waiheke on the stern.  She also does print on pottery before it is fired.  This requires a reverse printed photocopy which is then imprinted on the clay. Best of all are her hanging bird feeders for the garden, featuring brightly coloured glazes.  We visit a couple of places which I saw on Saturday before ending up at Jane Zusters’ spectacular open plan house surrounded by Kanuka trees.  Jane is an activist and although her colourful abstract work makes a splash on the huge double storied wall, it’s her black and white photos of feminist pro-abortion demonstrations in Christchurch which grab my attention.  There is the record here of what the city looked like in the seventies.  She’s also made a film protesting about the encroaching dairy industry onto the unique and environmentally sensitive McKenzie Country.

It’s almost time for the wine and cheese soiree at the Community Art Gallery, but we have to hang around until just before 5 when the doors are opened.  Many of the artists have contributed work and in particular there is to be an auction of ‘Round tuits’ later.  We grab a drink and enjoy sampling the excellent selection of cheeses.

Day 3 Monday

The Plastic Champagne Flute Tree
The Plastic Champagne Flute Tree

There are a few artists left on my list so I set out after lunch, starting at Calais Terrace.  Ann Skelly’s work is fascinating.

Walking up the drive-way, there are installations in the shrubbery made from recycled plastic, which prepare me somewhat for what is in store.  The vibrant red circular paintings of Pohutukawa are completely stunning and seem to have a three dimensional quality.  Then there is the wearable art: a gown made from green plastic water bottles, another from polystyrene and a hamburger which might be reclassified as edible art.

Ann Skelly's Studio
Ann Skelly’s Studio

Ann shows me her mermaid tail, made for her by a merman from the US.  She’s pretty good at holding her breath and I offer tips on butterfly drills, which might be useful when she’s swimming with it in the sea.  Further along the road is Linda Young  who incorporates movement into her shots so the blurred result is impressionistic.

Linda Young
Linda Young

She prints onto brushed aluminium and corrugated iron.  There’s a fantastic shot of a sunken wooden boat where movement of the water is created by the corrugations.  Right at the end of the road and down by Anzac Bay is Lois Simpson’s Boatshed Gallery.

Lois Simpson's Boatshed
Lois Simpson’s Boatshed

We have a great time talking about maps and how she ‘prints’ them onto her paintings, using a similar technique to Penny Ericson.  Daisy Solomon is a delightful last visit.  She’s also relatively new to Waiheke and has some powerful portraits of women in red portraying different emotions.

Daisy Solomon
Daisy Solomon

It’s her latest idea which really catches my eye.  She’s combining paint and collage made from magazine print.  She’s feverishly working on a girl paddling in the surf.  Daisy tells me she is using The Weekender for this because the blue they use for the ferry timetable is perfect for the sea and the white portrays the surf.  Look out for this painting in the next group show at the gallery.

 

The Waiheke Winter Arts Festival

Queens Birthday Weekend 30 May – 1 June

I never really understood why we celebrate QE II’s birthday at this time, when it’s not really her birth date.  Probably the actual day is inconvenient for the spread of holidays.  The upshot is that we have three days to explore the variety of artists who live and work on this island and there are 40 open studios and galleries to choose from. Its $15 to get the map and entry badge, each one individually made from recycled fabric and beer bottle tops.  There’s also  a wine and cheese soiree included on the Sunday.

Church Bay Sheep grazing

Church Bay Sheep grazing

I study the artists and mark those I’m interested in and set about creating a systematic route. It’s a stunningly clear day as I arrive outside the studio/house of Gabriella Lewenz  on the west end of the island, overlooking Church Bay.  Sheep (a rare sight now in New Zealand) graze safely on the hillside, back-dropped by the sea.  I’ve timed my start for 10am but there’s no one about as I enter the high airy studio. Gabriella's Studio

Gabriella’s Studio

You can’t rush abstract art and Gabriella’s sea inspired work gradually draws me in.  My attention turns to a work in earthy tones, standing out from the crowd of blue.

Card by Gabriella Lewenz
Card by Gabriella Lewenz

These are pictures you can live with, stress busting after a hard day at the office, they demand space to breath.  I want to buy a card and fortunately Gabriella arrives.  We get into a conversation about the art galleries of Boston, where she studied and I leave just as the next visitors arrive.  Barbara Robinson is on the way back to Oneroa.  An art teacher from Christchurch, she finds inspiration from the earthquake and Waiheke.  She’s brought her father’s South Island landscapes with her to create some remarkable collages by cutting them up and rearranging them to reflect both places.  It may sound sacrilegious, but her father’s work has had new life breathed into it.

Barbara Robinson and collages
Barbara Robinson and collages

On the other wall, her mother provides the materials.  Barbara has made angels from old table linen, crochet and lace work which would otherwise languish in a forgotten drawer.  Found drift-wood make up the arms and legs providing the perfect solution to every Waihekean Christmas Tree, to be brought out each year for generations.

 Leslie Baxter has very recently deserted creative Melbourne for artistic Waiheke.  He does dramatic kiln formed glass incorporating metallic oxides to great effect.  I wish him well here in his new life.  Emma Wright does abstract paining using resins to create three dimensional calming swirls.   Peter Rees is demonstrating how to photoshop an image.  He opens a very dark picture of sky, land and water on his computer and makes it look fabulous.   They are an engaging couple in a dramatic house perched high amongst the Kanuka tree tops.

Kauri couch
Kauri couch

John Freeman’s Kauriart is worth a look.  He has a stockpile of centuries old swamp kauri waiting to be turned into beautiful things from a huge sofa to small turned bowls.

I make my way over to Palm Beach to call on Alex Stone, another abstract painter and entertaining contributor to the Gulf News. I’m met at the gate by two large black dogs, who gently and silently escort me up the drive. His studio is packed with stuff but his non-abstract painting depicting the legs of First World War soldiers catches my eye.  Alex wants to know about my blog and googles me on the spot. My book Twenty-two Eighty-four is on the front page, so he wants to know what that’s about.  More people arrive and he demonstrates his technique of line making on the canvas. A great conversation from a well known Waiheke Bloke – you can look at his portrait at the Red Shed – see the blog before this.  Further down Tiri View Road is Wendy Grace Allen, newly arrived in Waiheke.  She’s spent time in Thailand producing bronze and glass casts of woven rice pots.  She’s still finding her feet but her work inspired by Van Gough’s Irises is stunning.  She’s painted her version of this very famous painting, photographed it and created an inkjet collage.

I’m starving now so a quick dash back to Rocky Bay for lunch is necessary.  This lines me up perfectly to visit Gwen Rutter just along the road where I admire her vibrant flax flowers and pohutukawas for which she is famous.  She tells me her husband hates flax and pulls it out at any opportunity.  Ceramicist Kiya Nancarrow is also in Rocky Bay.  She’s shivering in her south facing garage/workshop even though the sun is shining on the other side of the house.  Her large sculptural pieces remind me of giant wood shavings or pasta.  One piece is reminiscent of DNA.  She tells me that some of her work was in a Christchurch gallery during the earthquake, but when she plucked up courage to call and find out the damage, all of her work survived.

Kim Wesney's studio
Kim Wesney’s studio

There’s just time to go over to Trig Hill Road, Onetangi where Kim Wesney is showing her dramatic and brightly coloured paintings inspired by grand South Island landscapes.  I remember seeing these large works struggling to breath at the community art gallery.  Here they make sense, particularly with the option to look at the photographs which inspire the work.  Also here is Paula Richa, who combines fabric with paint to good effect.

The Strand Onetangi

The Strand Onetangi

It’s coffee time and The Strand at Onetangi is the perfect place to gaze out at sea and sky to reflect on the thirteen artists I’ve visited today.