JH

Nature as Sculpture

AA
View Discussion
Richard Orjis at Te Tuhi, Grass Circle, 2010 - 2011

Within this entangled morass of rampant, unchecked vegetation - before it finally gets dismantled, ripped up and resown - wild flowers, thistles and grasses will flourish and seed, jeopardising the impeccable lawn around its edges, providing food for breeding insects, and low shelter for visiting birds or the occasional small rodent.

Auckland

 

Richard Orjis
Grass Circle 2010 - 2011

 

11 September, 2010 - 11 September, 2011

Outside Te Tuhi, on the public front lawn between Michael Parekowhai’s giant coloured Cuisenaire blocks (Atarangi 11) and A.D. Schierning’s modest Freedom Fruit Garden of lemon trees, Richard Orjis has constructed an unusual botanical sculpture that strangely connects with his recent gallery-exhibited digital ‘collages’ and public performances that feature wigs and images of dangling straggly streamers.

Orjis’ outdoor sculpture is about process and the passing of time, but without the overt community emphasis of the Schierning or Parekowhai projects. However it does make us notice their physical changes, especially the subtle deterioration of the Parekowhai work, for it is about nature itself.

Inside a large ring rimmed by a flat concrete border Orjis lets kaihui grass and intruding weeds grow uncut, unweeded and unsprayed for a whole year. Within this entangled morass of rampant, unchecked vegetation - before it finally gets dismantled, ripped up and resown - wild flowers, thistles and grasses will flourish and seed, jeopardising the impeccable lawn around its edges, providing food for breeding insects, and low shelter for visiting birds or the occasional small rodent.

As the uncontrolled plants grow the disc-like work will acquire an unruly shape, thatched density and irregular height - a ‘flying freak flag’: to quote Jimi Hendrix’s vivid description of his own long hair. Without the officially set period of allocated time the gesture probably would be declared a fire hazard or public eyesore. As it is now, it is regarded as a special reserve, a cultivated ‘natural’ wilderness that develops a personality of its own, an artwork that mirrors the ecological interest of the community that encircles it and tolerantly permits its existence.

John Hurrell

Print | Facebook | Twitter | Email

 

Recent Posts by John Hurrell

JH
Ralph Paine, À la Leibnitz, eight framed drawings of watercolour and pencil. Each 230 x 310 mm.

Paine as Fan Boy

CHARLES NINOW

Auckland

 

Ralph Paine
Leaves From a Pillow Book

 

December 5 - December 21, 2024

JH
Installation shot of Veronica Herber's Making My Way Home exhibition at Melanie Roger.

Herber’s Torn Tape Graphite Grids

MELANIE ROGER GALLERY

Auckland

 

Veronica Herber
Making My Way Home


14 November - 7 December 2024

JH
Heather Straka, Age of Discovery The Painter, 2021, archival pigment on Photorag Ultrasmooth, 765 x 1135 mm.

Constructed Straka Photographs

TRISH CLARK GALLERY

Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland

 

Heather Straka
Isolation Hotel

 

26 November - 21 December 2024

JH
Winston Roeth, Belmont Quintet, 2024, Kremer pigments and polyurethane dispersion on five slate panels, 50,8 x 168.4 cm

The Pleasures of Chromatic Individuality

FOX JENSEN MCCRORY

Auckland

 

Winston Roeth
The Unbearable Lightness of Seeing

 

16 November - 14 December 2024