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Making Space: Walking, Shaping, and Interrelating (2023)

Doctorate of Fine Arts examination exhibition 2023

George Fraser Gallery, Auckland

Kiss It Better (2022) 

Finalist Molly Morpeth Canaday 3D award 

Kiss It Better plays on a simple act of healing where a sticking-plaster is applied with a kiss to make a small wound better. The work, made from half a bag of fast-set plaster, sits atop a trolley to make life a little easier. My relationship is one of collaboration allowing the materials to do what they do. The plaster is mixed with water and pigment, and when it becomes a thick cream, it is poured back into the bag. The negative space, which takes the form of the cast, becomes stuck and rigid by the solid pink body it contains.

Paper, plaster, pigment, wood, castor wheels

Dimensions: H 330mm x W 370mm x D 250mm 

Wandersmänners (2020)

Part of "Projects" curated by Micheal Do, Auckland (Virtual) Art Fair, May 2020

The artistic act of walking is an evergreen subject of the arts which emerges from the 19th century European artistic movement Romanticism which emphasised the importance of emotion and individualism. The work of these Romantics — which include philosophers Fredrich Nietzsche and Jean-Jacques Rousseau morphed into the mythic flâneur — or urban explorer — figure of the early 20th century. For McNeil, the politics of walking, encountering and conquering are deeply embedded within her practice. Comprising of collaged photographs of Auckland footpaths housed in plastic skeletal structures and objects collected during her journeys, Wandersmänner (2020) function as an archive of Auckland’s built environment.

 

As a woman exploring public space, these archives offer us a loaded personal and political examination of architecture and spaces, which have typically been designed and constructed by men. By documenting her walk — which itself allows for a personal, slow engagement of the world — these works are the result of McNeil’s process of prioritising, recording and organising the aspects of environment relevant to her experience of the world. In this way, these works display an alternate history of the built environment: one which recognises, privileges and preferences alternative subjectivities that have previously been disregarded.

Micheal Do, curator Projects 2020 Auckland Art Fair

Thermo-formed PetG, wire, photocopied images, found objects approximate dimensions 1400mm x 1200mm

Cradle Song

Flow, Nathan Homestead, Auckland, December - January 2020

 

Speed Dating 3.0 curated by Tyler Jackson

Play_station, Wellington, 25 September - 12 October 2019

Group show: Ed Bats, Natalie Guy, Tyler Jackson, Eloise Kirk, Kirsty McNeil

I Lean You My Support

RM gallery, Auckland July 24 - 10 August 2019

Group show: Kirsty McNeil, Java Bentley and Robyn Walton

... The place where it happens to be

Projectspace gallery, Auckland May 2019

 

untitled: rocks

Paper (wire and glue) and moving image

 

Arts Diary coverage © 2019 Sait Akkirman all photos http://artsdiary.co.nz/128/3082.html

 

 

 

Getting Around Town

Auckland Art Fair, The Cloud, Auckland May 2018

Digitised Super 8mm film, 03:26

View on Vimeo https://vimeo.com/244138065/7042143124

Link to Auckland Art Fair listing https://artfair.co.nz/artist/kirsty-mcneil/

Until the Petrol Runs Out

Whau Arts Festival, Avondale, Auckland 5 May 2018

Images Kimberley Annan 

Ford Escape, generator, projectors.

Collaborative film screenings with Kimberley Annan

Getting Around Town: Constructing Trajectories For Space

MFA Graduate Show, Dec 2017

Elam School of Fine Arts, University of Auckland

The mobility of the everyday journey provides the framework to consider the formation of space. In the book For Space, Doreen Massey proposes that space recognises a multiplicity of trajectories; it is a result of interrelations and therefore, it is always under construction. Sculpture and video operate using elements of space, light and materiality, which reflect the illusion and objectness of moving spaces in dialogue with transport and film history. At either end of the journey the passenger turns pedestrian and continues the trajectory of space in the duality of present and a virtual elsewhere using the mobile screen: feet tread the ground, head tilted slightly downwards, peripheral vision engaged with the palm angled upwards, cradling the device like a gently sloping ramp sliding through the digital field of where you are and where you are going.
 

Tangible Form

BFA(Hons) Graduate Show 2016

Elam School of Fine Art, University of Auckland Nov 26 & 27 2016

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