Neil Dawson: Five Years (2010)

Neil Dawson: Five Years (2010)

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When:

Sat 25 Sep ’10, 10:00am–6:00pm
Sun 26 Sep ’10, 10:00am–6:00pm
Mon 27 Sep ’10, 10:00am–6:00pm
Tue 28 Sep ’10, 10:00am–6:00pm
Wed 29 Sep ’10, 10:00am–6:00pm

Where: Milford Galleries Queenstown, 9a Earl Street, Queenstown Show map

Restrictions: All Ages

Ticket Information:

  • Admission: Free

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With over sixty permanent or temporary public works and commissions to his name, in recent years Neil Dawson has returned to making smaller scale works. Dawson's Five Years celebrates the important bodies of work that explore scale, illusion, structure and shadow.

Crater – Archaeology is explicitly concerned with volcanic landforms and uses the device of descending spirals to debate issues of the built environment (architecture), human settlement and culture. The form of this work alters dramatically with viewing position and the role performed by the internal shadow is, while understated, very powerful.

In 2006 Dawson was invited to visit Antarctica and on his return manifested this unique experience in major works. Thoughts on Ice, a wall-hung disc, is similar structure to Crater- Archaeology, in that the wire mesh forms peaks and valleys and the spiral element is repeated in this work. Thoughts on Ice is noticeably more literal as well as ethereal and transient.

The Vanishing Point works are also informed by Neil Dawson’s time in Antarctica and further develops his interest in the cone form of the Chalice work in Christchurch’s Cathedral Square. He explores illusion, structure, space and spiralling patterns in these. However the important role of shadow is viewed outside the work and is directly influenced by light angle.

The Sweep series is dynamic in character with scale alteration establishing powerful sensations of movement. Dawson juxtaposes constructed and natural objects, using contradiction, humour and illusion. He plays with perspective and notions of rising and falling.

In his major series Old, New, Borrowed, Blue plate works, Neil Dawson uses a nostalgic motif, the blue willow pattern, which is instantly recognisable as a pattern with considerable social significance to New Zealand (although based on British design interwoven with Chinese folk tale). In this series he uses processes of smashing, reassembling, scale alteration, distortion and illusion to create visually intriguing works. “I’m interested in showing people things they know, not things they don’t know. But doing it with a new and different approach – like I’m breaking things and putting them back together in my own way.” (Dawson, Art News, 2009)

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