Moog
Adrian Jackman, Artist
This is one of the
paintings
in our collection.
It was made in 2012. The place where it was made is unknown.
See full details
Object Detail
About the Work
One
of
the
aims
of
the
Sarjeant
Gallery's
artist
-in-residence
programme
at
Tylee
Cottage
is
that
the
incumbent
draws
inspiration
for
a
body
of
work
from
their
new
environs.
On
arrival,
Auckland-based
painter
Adrian
Jackman
set
about
exploring
his
temporary
home
on
bicycle
looking
for
a
series
of
reference
points
and
frameworks
that
provide
inspiration
and
a
colour
palette.
One way he did this was to look to Whanganui's impressive and diverse architectural heritage. One key bilding that struck the artist was the town's War Memorial Hall - this much celebrated example of Modernist architecture is situated near the Gallery. Jackman was drawn to this building and its perforated facade as a potential diagrammatic framework. The Hall, along with other local architecture, including the Savage Club and the Durie Hill Elevator provided inroads for learning about the town's history. Working from digital photographs he took of buildings and his new environs, Jackman created a palette of eighteen colours that he gave local names: 'Savage Pink', 'Durie Hill Green', 'River Gold', 'Kai Iwi Ironsane', 'Velodrome Blue' and 'Papa Clay Ground'.
For Jackman, coming to Whanganui also brought back childhood memories of making tghe long trip from Auckland to visit relatives in the town. As a result of the residency he has also begun to explore his own family history and maternal Maori heritage. Although this hasn't manifested itself in symbolism that specifically refers to his own tribal affiliations, Jackman has used an image of a tiki that also has connections with Tylee Cottage. The image is taken froma pair of bookends in the form of tiki that were gifted to the cottage in 1992.
These objects have inspired artists Peter Peryer and Bronwynne Cornish to make their own responses, and in turn Jackman has used the bookends as source material, adding to the visual conversation around them....
Greg Donson, Curator & Public Programmes Manager, Sarjeant Gallery. Sarjeant Quarterly volume 51 Dec 2013 - Feb 2014
One way he did this was to look to Whanganui's impressive and diverse architectural heritage. One key bilding that struck the artist was the town's War Memorial Hall - this much celebrated example of Modernist architecture is situated near the Gallery. Jackman was drawn to this building and its perforated facade as a potential diagrammatic framework. The Hall, along with other local architecture, including the Savage Club and the Durie Hill Elevator provided inroads for learning about the town's history. Working from digital photographs he took of buildings and his new environs, Jackman created a palette of eighteen colours that he gave local names: 'Savage Pink', 'Durie Hill Green', 'River Gold', 'Kai Iwi Ironsane', 'Velodrome Blue' and 'Papa Clay Ground'.
For Jackman, coming to Whanganui also brought back childhood memories of making tghe long trip from Auckland to visit relatives in the town. As a result of the residency he has also begun to explore his own family history and maternal Maori heritage. Although this hasn't manifested itself in symbolism that specifically refers to his own tribal affiliations, Jackman has used an image of a tiki that also has connections with Tylee Cottage. The image is taken froma pair of bookends in the form of tiki that were gifted to the cottage in 1992.
These objects have inspired artists Peter Peryer and Bronwynne Cornish to make their own responses, and in turn Jackman has used the bookends as source material, adding to the visual conversation around them....
Greg Donson, Curator & Public Programmes Manager, Sarjeant Gallery. Sarjeant Quarterly volume 51 Dec 2013 - Feb 2014
Measurements
550 x 555 mm
Media
vinyl acrylic on 300 gms Canson Montval watercolour paper
Description
Abstract image of a series of rectangles and squares in different colours of dark green, orange, light grey, tan and light green overlaid on top of and against one another.
Credit Line
Collection of the Sarjeant Gallery Te Whare o Rehua Whanganui. Gift of the artist, 2017
Collection Type
Permanent collection
Acquisition Date
30 May 2018