Jan 18 – Jan 30
Constable Country is an on-going transdisciplinary project involving installation of found reproductions, printmaking, video, digital drawing and digital prints.
When I was young my grandmother used to take me to Dedham Vale in Suffolk where John Constable set some of his most famous paintings. She also used to paint her own copies and sell these to friends sometimes changing the colours slightly to match their home décor.
Constable is a quintessentially English artist and I am struck by how many reproductions of his work I find in New Zealand. I began collecting these reproductions from charity shops and from on-line auction sites where some pieces were being offered for large sums with listings such as ‘is this an antique?’ and ‘signed and dated.’
Most people know at least some of Constable’s works through these reproductions in books, on tea towels and as framed ‘prints’ but few, particularly in New Zealand, will have seen the originals and few are aware that his major works are 4 feet x 6 feet ( 121 x 182 cm) in size.
The collected reproductions are displayed in groups that make up a 4 x 6 foot area to show the size of these originals.
Also included is a print ‘The Hay Wain’ the same size as the original paintings that responds to Constable’s works, a digital iPad drawing made over a picture of The Hay Wain and a video of the drawing that shows this process and a commercially produced digital printed postcard of the same drawing arranged as a multiple in a 4 x 6 foot block.
The installation offers a number of different but connected dialogues such as:
· My own childhood memories of place and my Grandmother
· The reproduction, assimilation and appropriation of old master works
· The introduction of the English landscape into New Zealand homes, a reminder of home and ancestry and/or another facet of the colonisation and anglicising of NZ by Europeans
· The nature of the original compared to the reproduction and the traditional versus the digital within contemporary printmaking.
I will be re-visiting the Stour Valley area later in 2013 and plan to continue the project through the production of a digital video that will relate to and expand on these themes.