Ticket Information:

  • Admission: Free

Dates:

  • Fri 10 May 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Sat 11 May 2024, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Sun 12 May 2024, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Mon 13 May 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Tue 14 May 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Wed 15 May 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Thu 16 May 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Fri 17 May 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Sat 18 May 2024, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Sun 19 May 2024, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Mon 20 May 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Tue 21 May 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Wed 22 May 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Thu 23 May 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Fri 24 May 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Sat 25 May 2024, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Sun 26 May 2024, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Mon 27 May 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Tue 28 May 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Wed 29 May 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Thu 30 May 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Fri 31 May 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Sat 1 Jun 2024, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Sun 2 Jun 2024, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Mon 3 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Tue 4 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Wed 5 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Thu 6 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Fri 7 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Sat 8 Jun 2024, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Sun 9 Jun 2024, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Mon 10 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Tue 11 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Wed 12 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Thu 13 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Fri 14 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Sat 15 Jun 2024, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Sun 16 Jun 2024, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Mon 17 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Tue 18 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Wed 19 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Thu 20 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Fri 21 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Sat 22 Jun 2024, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Sun 23 Jun 2024, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Mon 24 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Tue 25 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Wed 26 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Thu 27 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Fri 28 Jun 2024, 4:00pm–7:30pm
  • Sat 29 Jun 2024, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Sun 30 Jun 2024, 10:00am–5:00pm

Restrictions:

All Ages

Website:


Memory Lines
9 March–30 June 2024

Kirtika Kain The Solar Line II 2020, screen printing emulsion, gold leaf, gold paint, sindoor pigment, silicon carbide, beeswax, disused silk screen. Courtesy the artist and Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery.
Fiona Clark, Kirtika Kain, Rozana Lee, Sriwhana Spong and Hōhua Thompson.

Memory Lines brings together the work of five contemporary artists to consider the relationship between memory, knowledge and art-making. These artists use photography, film, sculptural installation, textiles and painting to traverse the terrain of epistemology, exploring the power and potential that art holds to preserve, transmit and interrogate our ways of knowing.

Fiona Clark is one of Aotearoa New Zealand’s leading photographers, whose work as an artist is intrinsically linked with her work as an activist. Clark’s photographs, made across a career spanning more than five decades, serve as a visual record of the knowledge embedded in the places, people and communities she pictures.

Kirtika Kain is a Sydney-based painter whose work often reflects upon collective memories held across the Dalit diaspora. Her sensorial painting practice incorporates materials such as sindoor pigment, beeswax, tar and gold to build a visual language that is at once richly evocative and densely symbolic. Memory Lines is the first time that Kain’s work has been exhibited in Aotearoa.

Rozana Lee’s practice often considers the power of pattern, material and form to hold cultural memory and reveal overlooked or omitted history. Her batik works, for instance, fuse together a range of symbolic imagery to question notions of originality, belonging and homethrough the frame of migrant experience.

Much of Sriwhana Spong’s recent practice has been shaped by her research into medieval women mystics, such as Hildegard von Bingen (1098-1179). Through spoken word, sound, sculpture and visual imagery, Spong’s work navigates the complexity of women’s relationships to power as it has been codified by society.

Hōhua Thompson’s large-scale installation practice frequently draws on pūrākau handed down to him through his whakapapa. For this exhibition, Thompson has created a significant new installation, which reflects on generational knowledge transmission, storytelling and kaitiakitanga.

Memory Lines issues a quiet, yet insistent, provocation. By destabilising the idea of knowledge as either universal or objective, it asks us to consider the capacity of visual and material expression to preserve and transmit memory.

Memory Lines is curated by Dr. Kirsty Baker

IMAGE Kirtika Kain The Solar Line II 2020, screen printing emulsion, gold leaf, gold paint, sindoor pigment, silicon carbide, beeswax, disused silk screen. Courtesy the artist and Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery.

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