Past Exhibitions

Nigel Brown

All Our Days

6 Jun - 1 Jul 2009

Exhibition Works

Dusky Sound
Dusky Sound (2007/08)
Once If Your Curiosity Continued Insatiable
Once If Your Curiosity Continued Insatiable (2007/08)
Birdless Days (Richard Henry) Larger Version
Birdless Days (Richard Henry) Larger Version (2007/08)
Resonate
Resonate (2008)
All Our Days
All Our Days (2007/08)
Cook Seven Times
Cook Seven Times (2008)
Life's Not Fair
Life's Not Fair (2007/08)
The Sea is Back
The Sea is Back (2008)
Madonna Mountain
Madonna Mountain (2007/08)
Delight in Difference
Delight in Difference (2008)
How to Get Here
How to Get Here (2007/08)
Cook Hei-Aha-Ha
Cook Hei-Aha-Ha (2008)

Exhibition Text

Nigel Brown has an established reputation as New Zealand’s most significant narrative artist. For his exhibition All Our Days at Milford Galleries Dunedin, the narrative continues as stories and situations are manifested in his use of motif, icon and symbolism. Captain Cook appears throughout the body of work as an iconic figure, not the man himself but an object of myth, a motif that stimulates environmental, political and cultural dialogues.

It is clear that the life and history of New Zealand is ever-evolving. A mural-like composition enhances the idea of progression and change. All Our Days (2007-2009) is visually rich with symbols and motifs steeped in our culture and history; McCahon’s lamps, koru forms, native flax and palm trees, even the poet James K Baxer.

Brown’s link to poetry is prevalent throughout his work, not only is the exhibitions accompanied by two poems by Glenn Colquhon, but also works reference poems, poets or have a poetic resonance. Birdless Days (Richard Henry) Larger Version (2007/08) features text from a poem “Richard Henry in Fiordland” by Gregory O’Brien dedicated to Nigel Brown and written on the Break Sea Girl, during The Dusky Trip taken by a group of artists and poets.

The Dusky Trip determines works such as Once If Your Curiosity Continued Insatiable (2007/08), showing Dusky Sound as based in a painting from 1863 by John Buchannan. This painting contrasts the ideas of then and now, in relation to exploration, conservation and human presence as does Dusky Sound (2007/08) where place names in Dusky Sound border the image of Cook within the landscape.

Many of the works such as Delight in Difference (2008), Cook Hei-Aha-Ha (2008), Resonate (2008) feature Cook as a Polynesian or Maori figure. Here Cook refers to the changing aspects of New Zealand as part of the Pacific “an Aotearoa moving beyond its colonial beginnings well and truly. The land absorbs us and we become naturalised.” (1) In Cook Seven Times (2008) Cook becomes a symbol of New Zealand’s changing and transforming identity. In Life’s Not Fair (2007-08), Cook is shown as a Polynesian figure, with a Tiki behind his ear. This work has strong connections to Cook’s death in Hawaii however also refers to the fact that everyone is on a journey, and sometimes it doesn’t quite go as planned.

To engage in Nigel Brown’s work is to embark on a journey of exploration and discovery. The layers of symbolism and narrative elements send one into a new world where connections are made and ideas are manifested and transformed. All Our Days is about every-one of us as New Zealanders taking part in an ever-evolving history.

1. Nigel Brown, Artist Statement, 2009.

THE EXHIBITION CONSISTS OF 31 WORKS IN TOTAL – TO VIEW ALL OF THE WORKS PLEASE CLICK BELOW TO VIEW THE EXHIBITION CATALOGUE

A high resolution version of the catalogue with details of works and navigation functions is available on CD for $15 plus postage - Please contact Milford Galleries Dunedin - contact us

exhibition catalogue