Nau mai, haere mai, welcome to EyeContact. You are invited to respond to reviews and contribute to discussion by registering to participate.

JH

Fiona Connor on the Representation of John McLaughlin

AA
View Discussion
Fiona Connor, John McLaughlin in Print, as installed in Auckland Art Gallery. Photo: Fiona Connor Frank J Thomas,  Documentation of paintings by John McLaughlin at McLaughlin’s home,  digital prints of scanned 4 x 5 inch transparencies, courtesy of the Frank J Thomas Archive Fiona Connor, John McLaughlin in Print, detail, as installed in Auckland Art Gallery. Photo: Fiona Connor Fiona Connor, John McLaughlin in Print, detail, as installed in Auckland Art Gallery. Photo: Fiona Connor

So while we don't experience McLaughlin's artistry directly (none of his paintings are included), Connor's show instead examines art historical and sociological processes: the modernist documentation of innovation, the possible embedding of influential published opinions into the academic corpus of ‘acceptable' discussion, and the increasing awareness of new related content by the wider art audience. The dispersal of information and the acquiring of reputation.

Auckland


Fiona Connor (as curator)
John McLaughlin in Print

 

19 September - 16 October 2016

Donning her visored helmet and radiation-blocking, shiny space suit, and floating back through time, Fiona Connor in this AAG show takes us to a distant planet when art critics reviewed exhibitions in ink printed newspapers and the glossy pages of magazines, writing about artists like LA painter John McLaughlin (1898-1976) who had his first solo exhibition at the age of fifty-four. A minimalist painter much admired (and referenced) by Gordon Walters, McLaughlin’s nuanced works - from the late sixties and early seventies - are in this show mediated and recontextualised by six black and white, pre-cropped images of newspaper photographer Frank J. Thomas (taken outside in the artist’s garden), and the writings of local reviewers, Henry J. Seldis and Arthur Millier.

Mind you, the yellowing decaying newsprint from the mid-fifties (three digital copies of Los Angeles Times microfiches screened on to extremely thin coated foil) is very hard (if not impossible) to read, yet it is intriguingly mingled with local Californian advertisements, and placed above a mid-eighties international publication, Life magazine - its coloured illustrations include the artist posing with a painting on a golf course - along with a couple of elegant McLaughlin catalogues. All this in a large wall vitrine, positioned outside the entrance to the gallery’s E. H. McCormick Research Library.

Connor is fascinated by changing technologies and morphing community contexts, the continually evolving historical areas that those interested in ‘pure’ painting tend to deliberately ignore. She finds humour in the fact that despite the cropping out of various backyard details - such as a section of hose or portion of a concrete block wall - the final image on the newspaper page is surrounded by advertisements and various references to life in California. Even though local context is blocked by the front door it comes creeping in through the back.

There is also the fact that the shapes and colours (or tones) McLaughlin uses all have coincidental associations with aspects of nature or culture, despite the artist’s wishes to downplay them, to focus solely on perceptual or formal compositional properties as ‘meaning’ - albeit grasped at that time by a comparatively small coterie of ‘educated’ enthusiasts.

So while we don’t experience McLaughlin’s artistry directly (none of his paintings are included), Connor’s show instead examines art historical and sociological processes: the modernist documentation of innovation, the possible embedding of influential published opinions into the academic corpus of ‘acceptable’ discussion, and the increasing awareness of new related content by the wider art audience. The dispersal of information and the acquiring of reputation.

There is also the exhibition itself’s participation - as a variety of curated (or possibly readymade) artwork - within Connor’s own career strategy, and what Connor, as a much respected artist, provides for the institution, creating an absorbing display that links Los Angeles with New Zealand’s own art history (though not stated), local LA newspapers with McLaughlin catalogues (an acquired Auckland Library resource kept in the gallery); showing how one form of (local) discursive publishing enterprise eventually led to the (international) other.

A rivetting, astutely observant, underpublicised - but not to be overlooked - exhibition.

John Hurrell

Print | Facebook | Twitter | Email

 

Recent Posts by John Hurrell

JH
Peter Robinson, Figure of Fun, 2009, charcoal and oilstick on paper, 1740 x 1400 mm  (framed)

Humiliating the Art-Hungry Viewer

COASTAL SIGNS

Peter Robinson

 

Drawings

 

3 December, 2025 - 5 February, 2026.

JH
Two visitors admiring the Roy Lichtenstein contribution. It shows smoke trails from fired rockets.

Impressive History of American Innovation

AUCKLAND ART GALLERY TOI O TAMAKI

Pop to Present: American Art (selected from the Virginia Museum of Fine Art)

 

Curated by Alexis Assam, Regina Perry, Sarah Powers, and Kenneth Brummel

 

8 November 2025 - 15 March 2026

JH
 Do Ho Suh, North Wall, 2005. Installation view at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2025. © Do Ho Suh

Evanescent Architectural Screen

AUCKLAND ART GALLERY TOI O TAMAKI

Do Ho Suh

 

North Wall, 2005

 

Curated by Natasha Conland

 

26 July, 2025 - 1 March, 2026

JH
Installation shot of Jim Roche at Starkwhite.

Eviscerated ‘Tunnelling’ Surfboards?

STARKWHITE

Jim Roche


Jim Roche


4 October - 8 November 2025