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Te Uru Presents - Cora-Allan Wickliffe: From Otītori Bay Rd.

Ticket Information

  • Free Admission

Dates

  • Thu 2 Jun 2022, 10:00am–4:30pm
  • Fri 3 Jun 2022, 10:00am–4:30pm
  • Sat 4 Jun 2022, 10:00am–4:30pm
  • Sun 5 Jun 2022, 10:00am–4:30pm
  • Mon 6 Jun 2022, 10:00am–4:30pm

Show more sessions

Restrictions

All Ages

Listed by

Elephant Publicity

This exhibition presents a series of landscape paintings made by Cora-Allan Wickliffe during her residency at Parehuia, which sits at number 67 Otītori Bay Road – a short but steep descent from Te Uru, toward the waters of the Manukau Harbour. Using paints harvested and processed from the local Waitākere whenua, the images are intimate studies of the land and a living archive of it, as well as visual journals of the artist’s stay.

Just as she gathered raw pigments, Wickliffe also gathered views of the landscape, and of objects, materials and her traditional tools – all with care, and a mind to understanding the subtleties of the whenua on which the residency was based. From pinks and reds to light greys, Wickliffe experimented with the whenua’s palette, applying these to different surfaces, including hand-beaten Hiapo cloth customary to Niue.

Many of these views were gathered and recorded from the Manukau Harbour, where Wickliffe spent time on a rowboat named after her late grandfather, ‘Koro’. Launching from Otītori Bay, the sea became an extended studio; using sea water as a base for her watercolour pigments, she documented the changing tides and weather patterns of her voyages in sketchbooks. Like fishing diaries, minute variations to tone and line in the drawings reflect these fluctuations.

These works mark a new chapter in Wickliffe’s practice that creates a space in which her Niuean and Māori whakapapa – and two unique bodies of indigenous knowledge – can meet and be shared with others, not least with her small whanau, who helped to harvest, process and record the pigments used in these works.

Cora-Allan Wickliffe: From Otītori Bay Road runs from 26 February 2022 - 5 June 2022.

Te Uru will remain open under the ‘traffic light’ Covid-19 Protection Framework. To keep everyone safe, all visitors over the age of 12 are required to scan in, display a valid vaccine pass, and wear a proper mask.

Te Uru is open to the public seven days during summer and autumn, 10am to 4.30pm and Tuesday - Sunday during winter and spring.

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