Pauline Rhodes In-between
3 December - 16 January 2000
Created by one of New Zealand's senior environmental sculptors, this site-specific
installation in the McDougall Contemporary Art Annex will transform 'ordinary' objects
into receptacles for the passing of time. Well-known for her Intensum/Extensum
(indoor/outdoor) series of works, Pauline Rhodes explores the vulnerability and transient
nature of materials and the temporality of the moment - fragile and frayed time.
Rhodes' art is perceptual, experimental and organic, an experience rather than a
commodity. The tangible form, in multiple and various states, is taken beyond the physical
to symbolise ideas and memories. Her work echoes the past and alludes to simultaneous and
future realities by representing ruins of objects. By collecting and assembling elements
and objects and presenting them in the process of devolution, Rhodes's work explores the
complex interiority of the mind and the inter-relationships of entities.
In recent years her work has been focused on interior landscapes and what Rhodes
describes as 'projects in the landscape'. The projects are ephemeral, just as life is. The
materials are related in size to the human body and its movement through space. I like to
be doing work which is self generating, has its own continuum of energy and evokes
universal life forces. Her on-going Intensum/Extensum series are temporary installations
which interact with the spatial environment in which they are placed, expressing more
about the mental and sensory experience than the merely physical. Characteristically,
these works involve minimal ephemeral placements of plywood, cloth, paper and metal and
wooden rods modified by the natural landscape and extending into spatial situations over a
period of time. Sympathetic to the environment, Rhodes' outdoor configurations of
materials echo the surrounding land or water forms and reveal the effects of weather and
time in the rusting of steel plates and mesh and the subsequent staining of cloth,
cardboard and wood.
Born in Christchurch in 1937, Rhodes lived in Wellington, Westport, Nigeria and England
before returning to Christchurch in 1970. Between 1972 and 1974, she completed her Diploma
of Fine Arts in Sculpture at the University of Canterbury and, after attending Teacher's
College in 1976, spent a year teaching part-time before beginning her full-time artistic
career. Rhodes was the first ever recipient of the Olivia Spencer Bower Foundation Annual
Award in 1987 and received grants from the Queen Elizabeth Arts Council in 1989 and 1992.
In 1993 she was selected as the Otago Polytechnic Art School Artist in Residence. She
received the CoCA Travel Award in 1995 and was awarded a Merit Prize in the 1996 Visa Gold
Art Award. Rhodes began her outdoor projects in the mid-1970s and has exhibited work
internationally since the early 1980s. Her solo installations include: Energy Fields,
Stone Movements, C.S.A. Gallery, Christchurch, 1977; Intensums, Robert McDougall Art
Gallery, Christchurch, 1982; Extensum/Extensor, Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, New Plymouth,
1983; Intensum in Memorium (project series), City Art Gallery, Wellington, 1987;
Dark/Light, Jonathan Jensen Gallery, Christchurch, 1996; Intensums-Stained Memories, The
Honeymoon Suite, Dunedin, 1998 and Stained Silence, 81/98, Jonathan Smart Gallery,
Christchurch, 1998. In 1998, Rhodes' Intensum/Extensum 1981 was part of the Action Replay
exhibition at ARTSPACE in Auckland and earlier this year she participated in Oblique, a
site-specific, multi-artist project at Otira.
Felicity Milburn
This exhibition was held at the Robert McDougall Contemporary Art Annex in the Arts Centre.
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