Media Type: Photography

  • Neil Pardington

    Neil Pardington

    About the Artist

    Neil Pardington (Kāi Tahu, Kāti Mamoe, Ngāti Kahungunu, Pākehā) is a photographer and designer based in Wellington. He has exhibited widely including the major Christchurch Art Gallery exhibition The Vault: Neil Pardington (2009) which toured to City Gallery (2011) and Otago Museum (2010) and solo exhibitions such as Solo 2016: Six Wellington Artists at The Dowse Art Museum. Others include the major exhibition Civilisation: The Way We Live Now, National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Seoul (2018); Ullens Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing (2019); National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne (2019) and Auckland Art Gallery (2020).

  • Emma Bass

    Emma Bass

    About the Artist

    Emma Bass studied photography in Auckland and pursued it as a full time career about 30 years ago, building a considerable reputation as a go-to practitioner for the quality of her portraiture, interiors and other commercial work.

    She began exhibiting fine art photography with a series exploring the reality of pregnancy and motherhood. The Imperfect series later focused on unexpected images of flora, beautifully arranged in vintage vases, but finding beauty in the imperfect, aging or wilting. More recent works layer photography with painted elements, or introduced bugs and insects.

    Recent Works

    Bass draws us in with palpable textures, sublime colours, flower arrangements perfectly lit. Then you realise things are not as they seem, that she has made something exquisite of flora beginning to fade, fall, wilt – the reality of ageing. There’s an undercurrent of humour: a tulip gracefully tipping to kiss the table; comical red hot pokers on snaking stems searching to escape the formal vase; life’s rejects—thistles, weeds—elevated to celebrity status in formal poses, translucent beauties. Insects lurk in dark spaces, or stalk the petals of a peony.

    Her limited edition works appear studio-lit, yet most often are captured on a ledge at her Auckland home. She references centuries of European paintings of fruit and flowers as a metaphor for life, but her work owes more to the Japanese philosophy of Wabi-sabi, an acceptance of the integrity of things as they are. She matches the subject flora with one of her large collection of vintage vases, some Crown Lynn, others acquired from around the world.

  • Sir Grahame Sydney

    Sir Grahame Sydney

    About the Artist

    Over decades of exhibiting, Sir Grahame Sydney has become celebrated as the definitive painter of Central Otago: its vast hinterland spaces, endless skies and folded mountains, dwarfing human occupation and existence. There is a surreal quality, an ineffable tension, to these dramatic paintings which have made his body of work iconic. Now, he’s moved on. Not from Central Otago, where he still lives and works, but in subject and artistic quest. His paintings are only rarely exhibited for sale, with a waiting list for his work. The lithographs he produced periodically are equally sought after, but remain affordable and very collectible.

    His work is held in national collections including Te Papa Tongarewa (the Museum of New Zealand) and in international private collections.

    Sir Grahame Sydney was born in Dunedin in the South Island of New Zealand in 1948. He graduated Bachelor of Arts in 1969 and began his full time art career in 1974 after a period of teaching and overseas travel. He was Frances Hodgkins Fellow at the University of Otago in 1978, and exhibited widely throughout New Zealand, also in Sydney and London, since 1969. A major retrospective of his work, On The Road, toured New Zealand public art galleries from 2000-2002. Until Antarctica, his focus was almost exclusively on Central Otago and southern New Zealand and his intimate knowledge underscores the power of his paintings.  He remains best known for his finely realist and iconic paintings, and as art critic Keith Stewart says: “you don’t just see the land here, you feel it”.  Sir Grahame Sydney is also well known for his photographs, and strikingly beautiful printmaking, particularly figure studies, and has worked in egg tempera, watercolours, oils, lithography and etchings. Major publications on his work, including The Art of Grahame Sydney and Timeless Land, have won prominent book awards.