Evolutions of Galaxies

04/8/2022 04/23/2022 Australia/Melbourne Evolutions of Galaxies

Join us at the MADA Gallery for an exhibition of work - Evolutions of Galaxies curated by PhD Candidate Melanie Oliver.

Works by Ruth Buchanan with Lily Gentile, Emma Fitts and Shannon Te Ao.

'Evolutions of Galaxies' includes works that are traces of earlier exhibitions, mingling ghosts, times and cosmologies. Ruth Buchanan (Pākehā, Te Ātiawa, Taranaki) reiterates her washes over the institutional white of the gallery space with a lilac wall painting performed by her niece and student at MADA, Lily Gentile (Pākehā, Te Ātiawa, Taranaki). Emma Fitts (Pākehā) presents sculptural textiles related to the architecture of the observatory at Tekapō, a dark sky reserve in Aotearoa, and the story of astronomer Beatrice Tinsley (1941-81) who discovered the life cycle of galaxies, proving that the universe is still evolving. Shannon Te Ao (Ngāti Tūwharetoa) offers an evocative waiata (song) from his video 'my life as a tunnel', looking at intimacy, loss and longing. Through their spatial, embodied practices, Buchanan, Fitts and Te Ao ask us to consider constellations of events, to observe different ideas of cosmology and to think of time as flexible and coterminous.

Event Details

Date:
8 April 2022 at 12:00 am – 23 April 2022 at 12:00 am

Description

Join us at the MADA Gallery for an exhibition of work - Evolutions of Galaxies curated by PhD Candidate Melanie Oliver.

Works by Ruth Buchanan with Lily Gentile, Emma Fitts and Shannon Te Ao.

'Evolutions of Galaxies' includes works that are traces of earlier exhibitions, mingling ghosts, times and cosmologies. Ruth Buchanan (Pākehā, Te Ātiawa, Taranaki) reiterates her washes over the institutional white of the gallery space with a lilac wall painting performed by her niece and student at MADA, Lily Gentile (Pākehā, Te Ātiawa, Taranaki). Emma Fitts (Pākehā) presents sculptural textiles related to the architecture of the observatory at Tekapō, a dark sky reserve in Aotearoa, and the story of astronomer Beatrice Tinsley (1941-81) who discovered the life cycle of galaxies, proving that the universe is still evolving. Shannon Te Ao (Ngāti Tūwharetoa) offers an evocative waiata (song) from his video 'my life as a tunnel', looking at intimacy, loss and longing. Through their spatial, embodied practices, Buchanan, Fitts and Te Ao ask us to consider constellations of events, to observe different ideas of cosmology and to think of time as flexible and coterminous.