Do you sell tickets for an event, performance or venue?
Sell more tickets faster with Eventfinda. Find out more. Find out more about Eventfinda Ticketing.

You missed this – Subscribe & Avoid FOMO!
Asgar Bozorgi; Auction & Exhibition

Ticket Information

  • Free Admission

Dates

  • Sun 13 Sep 2020, 10:00am–2:00pm
  • Mon 14 Sep 2020, 10:00am–4:00pm
  • Tue 15 Sep 2020, 10:00am–4:00pm
  • Wed 16 Sep 2020, 10:00am–4:00pm
  • Thu 17 Sep 2020, 10:00am–12:00pm

Show more sessions

Restrictions

All Ages

This exciting fundraising auction and exhibition features the stunning early work of Asgar Bozorgi. Originally from a private collection in New Zealand, it has been donated to CAN to raise funds for the arts centre and also the SPCA. This is a rare opportunity to own a piece of an international artist’s work, so come along to the celebratory opening on Friday 4 September, 5-7pm, enjoy the fun of the Auction and add your red dot to the gallery! All welcome and light refreshments will be served.

Brayden Coldicutt from Harcourts Napier has kindly agreed to be our Auctioneer. The Auction will start at 5.30pm.

Asgar Bozorgi is an Iranian artist, living in Berlin. He was born in Tabriz in Iran in 1954 and studied at the art school there. From 1983 until 1989 he studied painting at the University of Mimar Sinan Instanbul, Turkey. Since 1989 he has lived in Germany, originally in Heilbronn and since 1998 in Berlin.

All framed in white, the beautiful collection on display in the CAN Main Gallery comprises of 18 contemporary abstract paintings varying in size but all containing vibrant fields of colour. As Bozorgi’s career progressed, it’s possible to see where these early works took him next. However, although his later works have become more refined, all of his works convey emotion through a combination of color and light. The most important aspect is the play of the opposition between surface and depth, concealing and revealing, which is introduced by layers of paint and subtle forms that are visible through them. The images created by Bozorgi act on the principle of jagged, perforated “curtains”, they unblock the layers of the unconscious and reveal what is hidden in it.

Bozorgi is currently exhibiting at the Galeria BWA in Katowitz, Poland.

So, how is it that CAN has been bestowed this incredible gift?

The tale of how this collection of Iranian artist Asgar Bozorgi’s early work came to be donated to CAN to raise funds is a fascinating yarn. Tanja Blinkhorn brought the paintings to CAN, and told us this story:

Tanja’s mother’s name is Helga Blinkhorn and Tanja grew up in Heilbronn, Germany. Heilbronn is a small town between Stuttgart and Heidelberg in the south of Germany. In 1990 Tanja left Germany to travel to the Cook Islands and New Zealand. She was away for nearly a year. In this time frame her mother met Asgar.

Asgar had no money at the time, and with Tanja’s room being empty in their flat, her mother, Helga offered for him to stay there. He felt very obliged and as he had no money, he wanted to paint for Helga. He didn’t have enough money to buy the resources though, so she bought them for him. He painted and gifted her all the paintings in the collection at CAN to her, plus five others which the family have kept.

Helga left Germany in 1991 to move to Capetown in South Africa. This is the same year that Tanja moved to New Zealand. She took all the paintings with her to Capetown and lived there for ten years. She loved it there, but as South Africa was becoming more and more unsafe for her to live there, she explored the idea of moving to NZ. At this stage Tanja had become a NZ citizen and as her only child Helga received Permanent Residency in four months and moved to Napier. She brought all the paintings with her.

In May 2020 year Helga moved into a senior residency facility in Auckland and the family decided to donate the paintings to CAN, so they could stay in Napier. A sincere thank you to Helga and Tanja Blinkhorn for this generous act, that will allow local art appreciators to enjoy these works for many years to come.

All works are for sale. The profits will help CAN, a registered charity, to deliver on it’s mission purpose to the wider community: ‘The positive support, exploration and development of the Arts in Napier, resulting in the widest dynamic arts interaction with the Community, that significantly contributes to our local and regional arts scene.’

As per Helga’s request, a donation of $200 from the sale of the work will also be made to the Napier SPCA.

Post a comment

Did you go to this event? Tell the community what you thought about it by posting your comments here!