After
two more days of pounding the pavements of inner-city Auckland, my feet are
sore, my Kathmandu sandals are cracking up under the pressure and I’m hoping
I’ve shed a couple of pounds but it has been worth it, as I now have photos of
all this year’s 46 Auckland Big Eggs in the bag! And there are some cracking
eggs (pun intended!) amongst them.
So,
following on from my blog on the first Auckland 23, here’s my take on the second 23. If only I could get to Wellington
and Christchurch
to see the other 54! As with the last post, much of the
information about these works has been adapted from the official website.The opinions, of course, are
entirely my own.
2 Andrew Barrie, New (Urban) Life
This
is a brilliant idea from Auckland-based designer and Professor of Design at the
University of Auckland ’s
School of Architecture and Planning, Andrew Barrie.
The surface of the egg is plain but the cut reveals a miniature urban
landscape, complete with tiny people, like a snapshot of New Zealand
architecture from early colonial days to more modern times. To me, the
simplicity and clean lines of his design reflects Barrie ’s
years of study and work in Japan .
12 Colin Mathura -Jeffree, Gondwana
Here
my ignorance of New Zealand’s reality television shows and media personalities
becomes apparent as I’d never heard of Colin Mathura-Jeffree before –
apparently, he is ‘an international model, actor and TV personality who is
known as the wild-haired, lamington-throwing judge on New Zealand’s Next Top
Model and who consistently created a stir in the New Zealand’s Hottest Home
Baker TV series’. Before becoming a ‘personality’, he had ambitions towards a
career in paleontology, hence the design of his egg. This egg has been
perfectly sited in the ‘Weird and wonderful’ area in Auckland Museum
and was a huge favourite with the kids when I was there yesterday.
15 David Trubridge, Nest
David
Trubridge is an internationally-recognised designer, who sailed (literally)
from studies in naval architecture in the UK
to establishing a life for himself and his family in New Zealand . His website showcases his very organic designs – the idea behind his kit-set products is to
minimise their ‘environmental footprint while also involving the consumer in
the creation process’. His egg hangs in the very posh Louis Vuitton shop in
Queen Street, a place I would never normally enter – not that you have to push
open the door for yourself – a doorman is employed to do that for you. I felt
very inadequately dressed for the experience!
25 Fletcher Vaughan , Haven't
Been The Same Since
The
website tells me: ‘Founder and creative director of Fletcher Systems, a furniture
brand and production company with more than 10 years of manufacturing
experience, Fletcher Vaughan draws on his experience working in the music,
television and film industries to create eye-catching yet practical furniture,
and more recently public sculpture.’ I would say Vaughan is drawing on memories of nursery
rhymes for his egg – looks like Humpty Dumpty gone wrong to me!
26 Garry Nash, Gestation Of Intent
Garry
Nash is an Australian, turned New Zealander, and a glass artist of such repute
that he was awarded Officer of The New Zealand Order of Merit for his services
to glass art in 2001. His glass works are certainly extraordinary – take a look
at his website for a visual feast. In
comparison, I found his egg very disappointing – a few zigzag cut-outs in the
outer shell and lighting tubes inside didn’t excite me at all.
30 Gregor Kregar, Ovum-polis
After
studying fine arts first in his native Slovenia
and later at the Elam School of Fine Arts at the University
of Auckland , Kregar has gone on to
exhibit widely in New
Zealand and internationally. His often large-scale
and site-specific sculptures incorporate found objects alongside glass,
stainless steel and plastic. His idea here is a clever one, his Ovum-polis showing the roosters
convening for a meeting on the egg-acropolis.
32 Flox, Womb
I really like Hayley (aka Flox) King’s work but the setting
for this piece, tucked away alongside the main entrance inside the Viaduct
Events Centre, is appalling – you can’t fully appreciate Hayley’s wonderful
stencill work and you certainly can’t get good photos of the work. (Seriously,
Big Egg Hunt organisers – you need to do something about the setting for these
pieces next time around!) Flocks (hence, Flox?) of Hayley’s trademark native
birds can be ‘found flying across city streets, breathing life into the urban
environment and creating joyous celebrations of natural New Zealand’. Her egg
is inspired by her own pregnancy, the womb being a safe container for the egg.
For more of Hayley’s works, check out her website.
33 Hye Rim Lee, Crowned
Here’s
another egg that was difficult to photograph – shop windows do not make for
good display spaces! So, all I can say is that it looked a lovely pale lilac
colour – as to the rest, the website says: ‘Hye Rim Lee is a Korean New Zealand
artist currently working in Seoul, New York and Auckland. … Lee’s photos and
video installations tell a fantasy tale based on an intermingling of Eastern
and Western popular culture and the study of new technologies and how they
influence tradition. … Lee discusses the
changing roles of women, in particular Asian women, focusing on the rise of new
technology and contemporary mythmaking, which in turn leads to a heightened interest
in Western consumerism and beauty ideals.’
37 Jeff Thomson, Red
Jeff
Thomson’s artworks are well known to most New Zealanders – from his gigantic
gumboot in Taihape to his Holden stationwagon at Te Papa, his corrugated-iron
sculptures come in all shapes and sizes and are symbolic of the quintessential
New Zealander artist with the good old ‘number 8 wire’ philosophy, using found
materials to create art. I love the bright red colour of this, I love the way
light plays across the curves of the metal, I love how tactile it is.
42 John Pule, The One and Only
Niuean New Zealander John Pule is an accomplished painter,
printmaker, poet and writer. Though he was only two when his family immigrated
to New Zealand, his work is informed and inspired by the history and mythology
of Niue, adapting traditional art forms and motifs to create Pacific-inspired
but highly original artworks. The setting for John’s egg, in the marine section
of Auckland Museum , is simply perfect, as the pure
blues of the piece and the ambient lighting combine with the museum specimens
to produce a visual delight for the egg-hunter.
47 Karl Maughan, Egmont
I
have been and always will be a gardener and garden admirer so I find Karl
Maughan’s huge hyper-real paintings of lush
gardens and native fauna – flower gardens, vegetable gardens, manicured bushes
and out-of-control wildernesses – totally charming. I’m not sure the same
concept works on a huge egg but his work is certainly immediately recognisable.
This is another work displayed in a window, in this case the four-window
Britomart Project Space, so apologies for the poor photographic reproduction
with its background traffic design!
48 Karley Feaver, Homage to Spring
Here’s
another nature-inspired egg, this time from New Plymouth-born artist Karley
Feaver. She works across a range of disciplines including painting, sculpture
and photography, exploring the symbolic nature, adaptation and transformation
of animals in art with, perhaps a little bizarrely, a keen interest in
taxidermy. If that intrigues you as much as it intrigues me, take a look at her website. Not that there’s any taxidermy on
her egg – at least, I don’t think her butterflies were once alive! This poor
egg is in the worst possible place – it is actually inside a wedge-shaped area
that forms part of the revolving door into the Viaduct Events Centre. So, to
see it, you have to walk around inside the door, following the egg as you both
revolve, trying not to trip over as you bend down to look at it.
53 Louise Purvis, Nest Egg
It
took me a while to find this egg and, in the end, I asked a staff member at the
Auckland Art Gallery .
It hangs outside but high up under the magnificent wooden ceiling of the new
gallery extension, so you can’t actually get a good look at it. New Zealand
artist Louise Purvis works primarily in stone and metals – I presume this is the latter.
54 Lyonel Grant, Tamariki
Lyonel
Grant, Te Arawa and Ngati Pikiao, is a gifted sculptor, master carver and
designer working in many media including stone, wood, bronze, glass, ceramics and
paint. I admire the precise symmetrical lines of his work – he uses traditional
Maori motifs but reworks them to form a piece that is striking and
contemporary.
56 Matt Ellwood, El Salvador
Matt
Ellwood is a senior lecturer at Whitecliffe College of Arts and Design and has
exhibited widely in New Zealand ,
Australia , New
York and Switzerland .
The Big Hunt website says he ‘employs the various vocabularies of current
advertising, outdated men’s magazines, and toy merchandising as abundant
resources for appropriation-based sculptures, drawings, and digital
interventions’ - though I can't see those influences in his egg design. Sadly,
this is another window-displayed piece which has proven difficult to
photograph.
63 Nigel Brown, Egglantia
A
full-time artist since 1978, Nigel Brown has exhibited in locations as diverse
as Scott Base in Antarctica and the New Zealand Embassy in Moscow . He describes himself as an expressive
realist or symbolic expressionist, and is inspired by Maori, Pacific Island
and Aboriginal art as well as the European exploration and settlement of the South
Pacific. The avian designs on his egg are a perfect match for its setting
alongside the New Zealand
bird displays in Auckland
Museum .
65 Paul Cullen, Ladder
As
Paul Cullen’s egg is displayed in the window of real estate agency Barfoot and
Thompson, the inclusion of a ladder in his design seems the ideal match.
Cullen’s sculptures are usually constructed from such accessible materials as
stones, sticks, pieces of glass, string, paper, balsa wood and rag, items which
satisfy perfectly ‘his need to make things: to work in and with space, to plan
and organise something with a direct and physical outcome’.
68 Regan Gentry, Flamebuoyant
Sculptor
Regan Gentry uses a wide range of materials and situations in his work, which is
characterised by a playful musing and using of material, language, location and
structure. He says: “The phrases, materials and circumstances I employ in my
works are chosen for their familiarity and well-established usage in our lives’.
This stone egg sits in a shallow pool in front of the Auckland Art
Gallery , the perfect
fire-proof setting as there is a series of lit burners directing red-hot jets
of flame at the underside of this piece. I preferred the contrast between the
egg’s stony surface and the smooth painted wall of the gallery, so have cropped
the burners out of my shot.
71 XXX XXXXXX, Too Many Salads
XXXXXX’s
egg (above) is covered with images of domestic items – a vase, bottle, jug, teapot – so
has been very appropriately situated between display cases of historic ceramics
in Auckland Museum . XXXXXX has this to say, ‘A lot
of the artwork that I have previously produced has been purchased by private
clients and hung in a domestic setting. This really interests me, because the
artwork is taken out of the vacuum of the gallery and placed back in a context
where household objects interact and interweave with the work.’ (See below re XXXXXX)
79 Saatchi & Saatchi Design, Chicken or the Egg
I
guess someone had to do it, plaster an egg with feathers and ask the age-old
question of which came first, the chicken or the egg. Saatchi & Saatchi
Design Worldwide is an independent design group operating globally within the
Saatchi network, and they believe ‘design is about bringing ideas to life’. Not
exactly hugely imaginative but tick!
80 Shane Hansen, Aroha
I’m
not exactly sure what a huge pair of antlers has to do with Aroha, but Hansen
says the love of life and for New
Zealand with its Maori culture and unique flora
and fauna is a huge inspiration and recurring subject of his work. Hansen is of
Maori, Chinese, Danish and Scottish descent so I guess all of that ancestry has
played its part in influencing this design.
87 Misery, Jerboa Egg
With
its gloriously vivid colours, its smiling flowers and cute creatures, I’m sure
this is a favourite with younger egg-hunters – it certainly made me smile.
Misery is the graffiti street art and fashion label of Australian Tanja Jade
Thompson, who has held international exhibitions in Berlin ,
Taiwan , Melbourne ,
Paris and Los
Angeles .
90 Virginia King, Wing And A Prayer
Though
its window setting meant it was difficult to fully appreciate the delicacy and
precision of Virginia King’s creation, I quite liked the contrast of her fluid,
organic sculpture with the lines and angles of the brickwork and the reflection of the scaffolding enveloping the building on the other side of Customs Street . She wants her work to
focus on “bringing attention to the fragility of the environment and the
delicate balance between sustainability and progress”, and I think this egg
does that very well.
An update
Look who I found in the meat section at the local supermarket today. British illustrator Martin Handford has a lot to answer for with his Wally character (or Waldo, if you’re North American). Is there anyone in the world who’s not familiar with Wally and his distinctive red-and-white-striped jumper? In this case, Wally is like the joker in the Whittaker’s Big Egg Hunt, moving to different locations each day and worth more points than all the other eggs. Nailed!
An update
Look who I found in the meat section at the local supermarket today. British illustrator Martin Handford has a lot to answer for with his Wally character (or Waldo, if you’re North American). Is there anyone in the world who’s not familiar with Wally and his distinctive red-and-white-striped jumper? In this case, Wally is like the joker in the Whittaker’s Big Egg Hunt, moving to different locations each day and worth more points than all the other eggs. Nailed!
A
second update re number 71 Too many
salads by XXX XXXXXX
The artist contacted me and asked that his work be removed from my blog because he wanted a Google search to highlight his current work and it seems my little blog has received too much exposure and so was ranking higher in Google searches. Removing this entry was not an option for me – the whole point of this blog was that I had found all the eggs, so I offered to add a link to his current work / agent’s gallery / whatever. The artist didn’t like that idea – it seems he would rather not highlight his older work as he’s trying “to sculpt his brand”. So, I’ve removed his name and will leave you to decide what you think about the brand sculpting!
A further update re number 71 Too many salads by XXX XXXXXX
Despite the above change being agreed by email with the artist, he went on, several months later, to file a copyright infringement notice against me. It seems he objects to having a photograph of his early work on public display. I have therefore altered the photograph so that his work is not on display. I will not publicly convey what I think about this artist, his attitude or his work, in case he also objects to that! Suffice to say, I would never buy any of his creations.The artist contacted me and asked that his work be removed from my blog because he wanted a Google search to highlight his current work and it seems my little blog has received too much exposure and so was ranking higher in Google searches. Removing this entry was not an option for me – the whole point of this blog was that I had found all the eggs, so I offered to add a link to his current work / agent’s gallery / whatever. The artist didn’t like that idea – it seems he would rather not highlight his older work as he’s trying “to sculpt his brand”. So, I’ve removed his name and will leave you to decide what you think about the brand sculpting!
A further update re number 71 Too many salads by XXX XXXXXX