White Clay
Kate Fitzharris, Artist
This is one of the
ceramic artworks
in our collection.
It was made in
Whanganui, Whanganui Region, New Zealand
in 2019.
See full details
Object Detail
About the Work
Kate
Fitzharris:
Things
don’t
end
at
their
edges
In February 2018, Kate Fitzharris arrived in Whanganui from the other end of the country - Waitati just outside of Dunedin - to be artist-in-residence for five months at Tylee Cottage with the Sarjeant Gallery. The residency offered Fitzharris the opportunity to research, consider and begin a new body of work.
Fitzharris studied ceramics at Otago Polytechnic and the medium of clay has held her attention ever since. From the outset her practice has been deeply interested and invested in the language of objects that largely reside in the domestic realm.
This exhibition represents a year long journey for the artist, who also works part time as a librarian, and it was the concept of a library that was the genesis of this project. During her time in Whanganui Fitzharris made an open call for members of the community to share with her ceramic objects that were important on a personal level and had stories attached to them. The brief for what that object could be was essentially that it was made from clay, hence the diverse array of items that surfaced for the project. These range from electrical insulators, bricks, E.T. figurines, playing boxer dogs, fighting boxing men to more recognisable everyday domestic items like cups, jugs and containers. A selection of these objects can be found on display in the exhibition.
Each of these objects from close to forty participants came with stories that shift and alter perceptions of the objects beyond their physical form. As American curator and scholar Glenn Adamson notes in his book Fewer, Better Things (Bloomsbury, 2018) “As a culture we are in danger of falling out of touch, not only with objects, but with the intelligence they embody: the empathy that is bound up in tangible things … every object represents a potential social connection. By better understanding the tangible things in our lives we better understand our fellow humans.”
So what does an artist do with a memory bank of objects and stories associated with them? In the case of Kate Fitzharris she takes them home, mixes them all up, adds equal parts of sensitivity, charm, mystery, imagination and skilled making then crafts her own collection of stories that have at their core other peoples’ narratives and memories.
So if this show was a book how should we read it? Well in this instance, we don’t need words, you’ll notice a distinct lack of labels for individual works, so instead take your cues from the ‘Library of things’. From these objects you’ll find echoes in the beautiful works that Fitzharris has made, they’re all interconnected by loops, lead characters, chains and imagination.
- Greg Donson, Curator and Public Programmes Manager, Sarjeant Gallery Te Whare o Rehua Whanganui. Intro text for Kate Fitzharris post Tylee residency exhibition at Sarjeant on the Quay, 2019
In February 2018, Kate Fitzharris arrived in Whanganui from the other end of the country - Waitati just outside of Dunedin - to be artist-in-residence for five months at Tylee Cottage with the Sarjeant Gallery. The residency offered Fitzharris the opportunity to research, consider and begin a new body of work.
Fitzharris studied ceramics at Otago Polytechnic and the medium of clay has held her attention ever since. From the outset her practice has been deeply interested and invested in the language of objects that largely reside in the domestic realm.
This exhibition represents a year long journey for the artist, who also works part time as a librarian, and it was the concept of a library that was the genesis of this project. During her time in Whanganui Fitzharris made an open call for members of the community to share with her ceramic objects that were important on a personal level and had stories attached to them. The brief for what that object could be was essentially that it was made from clay, hence the diverse array of items that surfaced for the project. These range from electrical insulators, bricks, E.T. figurines, playing boxer dogs, fighting boxing men to more recognisable everyday domestic items like cups, jugs and containers. A selection of these objects can be found on display in the exhibition.
Each of these objects from close to forty participants came with stories that shift and alter perceptions of the objects beyond their physical form. As American curator and scholar Glenn Adamson notes in his book Fewer, Better Things (Bloomsbury, 2018) “As a culture we are in danger of falling out of touch, not only with objects, but with the intelligence they embody: the empathy that is bound up in tangible things … every object represents a potential social connection. By better understanding the tangible things in our lives we better understand our fellow humans.”
So what does an artist do with a memory bank of objects and stories associated with them? In the case of Kate Fitzharris she takes them home, mixes them all up, adds equal parts of sensitivity, charm, mystery, imagination and skilled making then crafts her own collection of stories that have at their core other peoples’ narratives and memories.
So if this show was a book how should we read it? Well in this instance, we don’t need words, you’ll notice a distinct lack of labels for individual works, so instead take your cues from the ‘Library of things’. From these objects you’ll find echoes in the beautiful works that Fitzharris has made, they’re all interconnected by loops, lead characters, chains and imagination.
- Greg Donson, Curator and Public Programmes Manager, Sarjeant Gallery Te Whare o Rehua Whanganui. Intro text for Kate Fitzharris post Tylee residency exhibition at Sarjeant on the Quay, 2019
Media
hand-built ceramic with cotton thread
Description
Grouping of three ceramic objects made in a white clay. The central object is a vase with handles, two eyes cut through the side of the vase, a sculpted nose and mouth. Attached to one of the handles is a loop of cotton thread with a ceramic tag attached, laying on the support surface. To the left is a little pile of chain, with the links all formed in clay. To the right is placed a clay ring or bangle.
Credit Line
Collection of the Sarjeant Gallery Te Whare o Rehua Whanganui. Tylee Residency exhange, 2019
Collection Type
Permanent collection
Acquisition Date
2019