Krystina Kaza
Untitled, 2019
Hammered, anodised aluminium, silver
23.9 x 16.9 x 0.9cm
Photo: Arekahānara
He Pānui Anō ā Mātou ki a Koutou!
Another announcement from all of us to all of you!
V A R I O U S L Y E Q U A L T E R M S
Opening Thursday 5 December 2019
6 – 8pm
Teghan Burt & Jane Zusters
Felix Giles
Krystina Kaza
Roman Mitch & Penelope Sue
Potaka
Angela Reading
Te Maari
Yllwbro
In the Box of 1914, Duchamp noted that ‘linear perspective is a good way to represent variously equal terms,’* or the symmetry that is possible when there is a coming together able to recognise difference at equal value.
Tea will be served with Colonial Christmas Pudding, raspberry sauce, pouring custard and cream.
Nau mai, Haere mai!
*Marcel Duchamp, Robert Lebel, André Breton, H.P. Roché, Marcel Duchamp, New York: Paragraphic Books (1959).
Image: Mokopōpaki, Shopping List, 2019. Ink on paper.
By now, I ought to know better than to expect the expected at Mokopōpaki. Yet, reading that the title of the group show HĀTEPE could be translated as ‘algorithm’, my mind went straight to gloomy stereotypes of the internet, to the detection and exacerbation of insidious patterns of human behaviour. Such notions are not absent from the exhibition, but it is altogether brighter in tone, more immediately relating to a second translation: ‘to proceed in an orderly manner’. Orderly processes are everywhere, HĀTEPE seems to say – just as present in tāniko and the use of the starry sky to orient us in space and time as in the tangible-unknowable computer systems that support a world of Instagram and Twitter.
Nourishing networks thread the show. Spiral collective associates Marian Evans and Tiffany Thornley reconnect (as they did last year in This Joyous, Chaotic Place). A scroll of calligraphic visages by Julian Hooper, an elegant assemblage by Krystina Kaza, and witty paper-works by Cale Kaza and Finley Lazurek all stem from one nuclear family. My favourite pieces, a pair of felt and mohair dolls named Te Kōkako and Te Kererū Māui (both 2018), also embody whānau ties. The artist, Te Maari, is the Birmingham-based cousin of Jacob Tere, Keeper of the House at Mokopōpaki. Hovering before the wall, with embroidered moko and leaves (or perhaps feathers) sprouting on their faces, the figures are comforting and strange, within caressing distance and far removed from the problems of the exhaust-riddled street outside. They are, I fancy, like ‘worry dolls’, ready to hear our pains and to help us go on.
Francis McWhannell, The Unmissables: Three Exhibitions to See in July (The Pantograph Punch, 17 July, 2019)
Krystina Kaza
Roots in the ground and in the air, 2019
Wire, epoxy, rope chain, jump rings
115 x 41 x 1.8cm
Photo: Arekahānara
Krystina Kaza
Openhands (detail), 2019
Oxidized silver chain, oxidized copper wire
50.5 x 8cm
Photo: Arekahānara
Krystina Kaza
No title, 2019
Coloured pencil on graph paper
29.5 x 21cm
Photo: Arekahānara