JH

Blessed are the Meek, Unassertive and Self-Effacing

AA
View Discussion
Kalisolaite 'Uhila, 'First will be last and last, first'. A performance at Michael Lett. Kalisolaite 'Uhila, 'First will be last and last, first'. A performance at Michael Lett. Kalisolaite 'Uhila, 'First will be last and last, first'. A performance at Michael Lett. Kalisolaite 'Uhila, 'First will be last and last, first'. A performance at Michael Lett. Kalisolaite 'Uhila, 'First will be last and last, first'. A performance at Michael Lett. Kalisolaite 'Uhila, 'First will be last and last, first'. A performance at Michael Lett. Kalisolaite 'Uhila, 'First will be last and last, first'. A performance at Michael Lett. Kalisolaite 'Uhila, 'First will be last and last, first'. A performance at Michael Lett. Kalisolaite 'Uhila, 'First will be last and last, first'. A performance at Michael Lett. Kalisolaite 'Uhila, 'First will be last and last, first'. A performance at Michael Lett. Kalisolaite 'Uhila, 'First will be last and last, first'. A performance at Michael Lett. Kalisolaite 'Uhila, 'First will be last and last, first'. A performance at Michael Lett. Kalisolaite 'Uhila, 'First will be last and last, first'. A performance at Michael Lett. Kalisolaite 'Uhila, 'First will be last and last, first'. A performance at Michael Lett.

People in opposite political or philosophical camps, who used to regularly discuss their points of difference in an effort to reach agreement, no longer do so, and confrontational taunting and yelling seems to be the new norm. Shrillness has replaced conversation—seemingly this is everywhere. It is a recent (I think calamitous) phenomenon.

Auckland

 

Kalisolaite ‘Uhila
First will be last and last, first

 

11 August - 1 September 2018

(Performances: Tues - Fri 11 am - 5 pm; Sat 11 am - 3 pm)

A meditation on humility that comes from St. John’s Gospel (1) in the New Testament, ‘Uhila performs this washing activity on the feet of volunteering gallery visitors who wish to take up his cleansing offer. In Biblical times it was refreshingly practical (as much as philosophical) for sandal wearers to experience it after a long walk, though the philosophical benefits were said to go to the washer.

However to expose your feet, and socks and shoes, involves a vulnerability in terms of cleanliness, possible disease, deformity, wear and tear, or fashion status—though you are receiving ablutions from somebody who is prostrate before you—and you (by revealing your possible material weaknesses) are being humble too.

There is an argument that this attitude is harmful, that humility encourages passivity and reinforces the injustices of the status quo by discouraging resistance; that religions often encourage it as a means of stratifying social hierarchies and encouraging blind acceptance of social cruelty.

However here is a counterargument to support ‘Uhila. It goes like this:

Today, we are living in extraordinarily troubled times where so many powerful world leaders seem to be—if not calculatedly evil or aggressive—then incredibly selfish or stupid. Tragically the world seems to have followed suit. People in opposite political or philosophical camps, who used to regularly discuss their points of difference in an effort to reach agreement, no longer do so, and confrontational taunting and yelling seems to be the new norm. Shrillness has replaced conversation; seemingly this is everywhere. It is a recent (I think calamitous) phenomenon.

In his offering of humility as a notion to think in depth about, ‘Uhila seems to be striving for social airs and assumed senses of entitlement to be deflated, and careful listening to be embraced. Both sides (from many conflicts) need to get off their ‘high horses,’ come down and meet halfway to listen and talk.

This is my interpretation, my own private extrapolation, not the artist‘s. I’m taking a guess, looking at what ‘being humble’ involves in today’s political climate.

You might argue—for reasons I anticipate in paragraph three—that such meekness is far too extreme. ‘Uhila is a Christian, I am not—though we were both raised Methodists. We talked about this while he washed my feet. It provided a good opportunity for conversation. There are six days remaining.

John Hurrell

(1). The exhibition title comes from Matthew 20: 16, and the activity references John 13: 13-14. (“Now that I, your Lord and Teacher have washed your feet, you also should wash one another’s feet.”)

Print | Facebook | Twitter | Email

 

Recent Posts by John Hurrell

JH
Alberto Giancomett, Paris Sans Fini, published drawing

Psychologically Intense Giacometti Prints

AUCKLAND ART GALLERY TOI O TAMAKI

Alberto Giacometti (1901-1966)

Without End

Curated by Kenneth Brummel

29 November 2025 - 11 July 2027

JH
Ammon Ngakuru, preparatory drawing/collage for installation of Three Scenes 2025 sculpture proposal at AAG.

Symbolic Ngakuru

AUCKLAND ART GALLERY TOI O TAMAKI

North Terrace

Ammon Ngakuru: Three Scenes 2025

Curated by Natasha Conland

27 September 2025 - 18 October 2026

JH

Sniffing Around Technology

TREADLER

The Odour of Smoke

Julian Dashper Estate, Billy Apple Archive (a Tim Garrity letter about BA), Nika Autor, David Clegg, and Christian Marclay

Curated by Christina Barton

12 December 2025 - 17 January 2026

JH
Installation shot of Dane Mitchell's exhibition, Archive of Dust, Room 18, at Two Rooms

Microbes in Dust

TWO ROOMS

Dane Mitchell

 

Archive of Dust, Room 18

 


15 November - 20 December 2025