Exhibitions

Fiona Pardington | Tarota

16.11.21 – 18.12.21

“Man passes through forests of symbols” – Baudelaire

Everything that exists is merely a symbol” – Goethe

Tarota is the newest body of still lives from Dr Fiona Pardington MNZM, Chevalier de l’ordre des Arts et des Lettres, (Ngāi Tahu, Kati Mamoe and Ngāti Kahungunu). The Tarot deck can be traced back to the fifteenth century, but the complex symbols and archetypes that define the meaning of each card have origins that disappear into the mists of antiquity. Each photograph in Tarota contains its own unique language of symbols like a tarot card. Some can, with a little effort, can be guessed at. Others are private and known only to the artist herself, relating to family, friends, lovers, each item as charged with memory as Proust’s madeleine. The “Proustian moment” is when a particular interaction with a sensory experience vividly conjures up a certain experience, time or a place from the unconscious mind. The mystery that Pardington evokes in these images what makes them so enchanting. The narrow field of view, distance from the subject, and long lens flattens, intensifies, and compresses the mise-en-scène. Details seem isolated, but really this is just the way each image explores relations in scale.

A degree of post-production refinement and enhancement is applied with sensitive and minimal digital intervention. The initial concept for these still lives, or after lives, comes from the paintings of the Bolognese modernist Giorgio Morandi (1890-1964), noted for the intense psychological space and muted palette of his repetitive still life studies of mundane bottles and crockery. Morandi’s still lives are sometimes compared to the surreal and atmospheric cityscapes in the metaphysical paintings of another Italian artist, Giorgio de Chirico (1888-1978), and in a similar sense Pardington is a metaphysical photographer.

“Et quid amabo nisi quod aenigma est? What shall I love if not the enigma?” – Giorgio de Chirico.

There is also, perhaps, a hint of French still life painter Henri Fantin-Latour (1836-1904) in these photographs as well, particularly the neutral, vague, and ambivalent monochromatic backgrounds so very like those behind Fantin-Latour’s vivid floral displays. Pardington carefully selects items that for often obscure reasons represent people and places in her life. Looking at them you can sense a syntax and network of allusions that remain just out of reach of the uninitiated.

It begins with a table as the stage for mobilising desire and performing taste, a place for interaction between problems and ideas. Although as Karl Marx declared in 1867 of the role of tables in commodity fetishism, the table:

“…not only stands with its feet on the ground, but in relation to all other commodities, it stands on its head, and evolves out of its wooden brain grotesque ideas, far more wonderful than if it were to begin dancing of its own free will.”

A scant two years later, proto-surrealist poet Comte de Lautréamont (Isidore Lucien Ducasse) proclaimed the radical new beauty of, “the chance encounter, on an operating table, of a sewing machine and an umbrella”.

Still life unifies the complex into a whole and makes the trivial desirable. It forces the objects within it to interact with each other and find their own logic and lingua franca. The still life can be many things – the captured and preserved moment of the ephemeral reminding us that only art lasts forever, memento mori – remember you too will die. Death intrudes in the form of Pardington’s skull-shaped gear shift handle and emptied vessels. Still life plays to our avariciousness and acquisitiveness with its peculiar glamour. It is a display of our treasures and the intense theatricality of the everyday. There is even an element of eroticism in the phallic bottles and pudendal silk roses.

These are coded representations of whakapapa in the sense of the cosmic GPS by which Pardingon aligns her identity by the stars, by the earth, by whanau spiritual and human. Time becomes a frozen circle, near and far contract, the sense of space swells with condensed emotion and magic through metaphor and allusion. Much of the aesthetic, the attenuated verticality and visual distortion in Tarota comes from the suite’s unannounced muse, the British occultist and artist Austin Osman Spare (1886-1956). Spare’s art nouveau, symbolist influence, and sinuous line help inform the composition and the emblematic drawings Pardington puts on some of bottles and other objects after she has coated them in paint. The paint helps unify the tonal qualities of the composition and enhances contrasts and shadows. The drawing is an innovation expanding on Pardington’s practice. This developed out of a period of illness that restricted Pardington’s ability to work with her camera and lights and acted as a form of therapy aiding recovery.

Other items among the assortment are unaltered, taken from the artist’s voluminous collection of objets trouvés and natural curiosities, gathered over the years. There is an incredible freedom here, to create to make juxtapositions that are congruous and incongruous, to shatter and subvert art-historical tradition, and to distort reality itself. Spare was also the originator of a form of sigil-based chaos magic by which the practitioner can distil their desires down into a symbol to be empowered by the unconscious mind. Pardington alludes to this as being analogous to the artistic creative process. Spare has become an important stalking horse in Pardington’s practice, and she even visited his grave at St Mary’s Church, Ilford in the UK one bleak northern winter. Spare also created his own tarot deck, though it was never put into production. This seventy-nine-card, hand-painted set of cards, created around 1906, was only discovered in 2013 in the collection of The Magic Circle Museum in London.

The power of the tarot is that it is interpretive. Its meanings respond to how the reader understands the symbolism of the cards and that itself is reflexive, responding to mood, fear, and desire. The purpose of tarot was never to predict the future, but to unravel and reveal the present or psychoanalyse the self on the path to transcendence.

Pardington’s Tarota works operate in a very similar way. They are deliberately open-ended to allow the viewer the opportunity to make their own readings and project their own fantasies. This is a reparative gesture as the artist sacrifices a lot of her intent and agency to invite the viewer into an intimate conversation my means of the photographic image.

Within them all potentials and possibilities lie.

Andrew Paul Wood, September 2021

Exhibitions

Current

Past

Gordon Walters | History

09.02 - 31.03

Whitney Bedford, Bill Henson, Ani O'Neill, Jonny Niesche, and Fiona Pardington | Sampler 2024

09.02 - 31.03

Jamie Te Heuheu | Quiet Thoughts and Quiet Dreams

23.11.23 - 13.01.24

Bill Henson | The Liquid Night

23.11.23 - 31.01.24

Bonco | Star Stare Start

20.10.23 - 19.11.23

Clinton Watkins | Depth of Field

20.10.23 - 19.11.23

Gordon Walters by Francis Pound | Book Launch

14.09.23

Curated by Jonny Niesche | Ümwelt

01.09.23 - 07.10.23

Richard Maloy | Raw

27.07.23 - 27.08.23

Petra Cortright | micro lemon diamond realm

07.07.23 - 26.08.23

Jonny Niesche | You say sfumato, I say sfumato

12.05.23 - 27.06.23

Billy Apple® | Divine Proportion

23.02.23 - 08.04.23

Gerold Miller, Gordon Walters | Miller meets Walters

08.12.23 - 31.01.23

FuckCancer_DontDelayFun | Blind Auction

27.10.22 - 05.11.22

John Reynolds | APOCALYPSEoCLOCK

21.10.22 - 01.12.22

Whitney Bedford | Imaginary

30.08.22 - 15.10.22

Seung Yul Oh | Huggong-Monologue

09.07.22 - 20.08.22

Gerold Miller

01.06.22 - 02.07.22

Bill Henson | Selected Works

30.04.22 - 29.05.22

Layla Rudneva-Mckay | I Roll

15.02.22 - 19.03.22

Fiona Pardington | Tarota

16.11.21 – 18.12.21

Fiona Pardington | Tarota Preview

05.10.21 – 07.10.21

Jan van der Ploeg | The Other Window

17.08.21 – 12.10.21

Laith McGregor | Second Wind

03.07.21 – 07.08.21

Richard Maloy | Maternal Routine

03.06.21 - 19.06.21

Bill Henson | 1985-2021

21.05.21 - 19.06.21

Martin Basher | Birds of Paradise

13.04.21 - 14.05.21

Will Cooke | Every Wall Is A Door

15.01.21 - 13.02.21

Jonny Niesche | Poikilos

17.11.20 - 22.12.20

Gemma Smith | Thin Air

06.10.20 - 07.11.20

Whitney Bedford, Petra Cortright, Kirsten Everberg, Judy Legerwood | Slippery Painting

01.09.20 - 03.10.20

Jin Jiangbo, John Reynolds | Performative Geographies

14.07.20 - 15.08.20

Group Show | Sampler 2020

14.05.20 - 06.06.20

Gordon Walters | From the Archive

05.02.20 - 07.03.20

Richard Maloy | Studio: Space & Time

28.01.20 - 01.02.20

Rebecca Baumann | New Work

27.11.19 - 21.12.19

The Estate of L. Budd et al. | the artists in conversation

22.10.19 - 16.11.19

John Reynolds | The Art of Wine

14.10.19

Billy Apple® and Tāme Iti | Flagged

08.10.19 - 12.10.19

Clinton Watkins | binary

19.09.19 - 03.11.19

Yuk King Tan | Crisis of the Ordinary

21.08.19 - 14.09.19

Group Show | Sampler 2019

23.07.19 - 15.08.19

Fiona Pardington | TIKI: Orphans of Māoriland

12.06.19 - 11.07.19

Laith McGregor | AM/PM/AM

09.05.19 - 08.06.19

BILLY APPLE® is N=One

11.04.19 - 05.05.19

Ani O'Neill | Classic Hits

14.03.19 - 10.04.19

Alicia Frankovich | Microchimerism

08.02.19 - 06.03.19

Martin Basher | One Week Stand

24.01.19 - 02.02.19

The Estate of L.Budd_et al.

11.12.18 - 22.12.18, 02.01.19 - 12.01.19

Gavin Hipkins | Block Units

14.11.18 - 08.12.18

John Stezaker | Collages

09.10.18 - 03.11.18

Grant Stevens | The Mountain and the Waterfalls

01.09.18 - 29.09.18

Whitney Bedford | Bohemia

31.07.18 - 24.08.18

Seung Yul Oh | Horizontal Loop

26.06.18 - 28.07.18

Gordon Walters | From the Walters Estate

29.05.18 - 16.06.18

Group Show | Sampler 2018

17.04.18 - 26.05.18

Alicia Frankovich, Ani O’Neill, The Estate of L Budd, et al. | 125

13.03.18 - 07.04.18

Len Lye | Love Springs Eternal

07.02.18 - 07.03.18

Richard Maloy | Things I have Seen

22.12.17

Michael Zavros | The Silver Fox

17.11.17 - 16.12.17

John Reynolds | RocksInTheSky...

17.11.17 - 24.12.17

Martin Basher | Devil at the Gates of Heaven

10.10.17 - 04.11.17

Daniel von Sturmer | Luminous Figures

02.09.17 - 30.09.17

Martin Basher | Hawaiian Tropic

01.08.17 - 26.08.17

Fiona Pardington | Nabokov's Blues: The Charmed Circle

23.06.17 - 23.07.17

John Reynolds | FrenchBayDarkly…

17.05.17 - 17.06.17

Group Show | On the Grounds

02.03.17 - 08.04.17

Billy Apple® | Art Transactions

08.02.17 - 04.03.17

Gavin Hipkins, Jin Jiangbo, Danie Mellor | Beyond Landscape

17.11.16 - 17.12.16

Laith McGregor | Swallow the Sun

01.10.16 - 12.11.16

Matt Henry | Analogues

19.09.16 - 14.10.16

John Reynolds | WalkWithMe...

30.08.16 - 24.09.16

Daniel Crooks | Vanishing Point

03.08.16 - 27.18.16

Gavin Hipkins, Richard Maloy, Daniel von Sturmer | Material Candour

05.07.16 - 22.07.16

Layla Rudneva-Mackay | Running Towards Water

07.06.16 - 08.07.16

Fiona Pardington | 100% Unicorn

24.05.16 - 25.06.16

Clinton Watkins | lowercase

19.04.16 - 18.05.16

Whitney Bedford 2016 | Lost and Found

15.03.16 - 14.04.16

Fiona Clark | For Pink Pussycat Club as part of THE BILL

20.02.16 - 22.04.16

Alicia Frankovich | The Female has Undergone Several Manifestations

06.02.16 - 05.03.16

Fiona Pardington | The Popular Recreator

11.12.15 - 23.12.15

Gavin Hipkins | Block Paintings

04.11.15 - 05.12.15

Gordon Walters | Gouaches and a Painting from the 1950s

21.09.15 - 24.10.15

Fiona Pardington | Childish Things

12.08.15 - 19.09.15

Rebecca Baumann, Brendan Van Hek, Alicia Frankovich, Len Lye, László Moholy-Nagy and Grant Stevens | In Motion

10.07.15 - 08.08.15

Grant Stevens | Hold Together, Fall Apart

07.07.15 - 02.08.15

Laith McGregor | Somewhere Anywhere

02.06.15 - 04.07.15

Arnold Manaaki Wilson, Billy Apple® | TOTEM | curated by Mary Morrison

01.05.15 - 30.05.15

Martin Basher | Jizzy Velvet

03.02.15 - 14.03.15

John Reynolds | BLUTOPIA

19.12.14

Seung Yul Oh | memmem

31.10.14 - 06.12.14

Gavin Hipkins | Erewhon

31.10.14 - 29.11.14

Rebecca Baumann | Once More With Feeling

19.09.14 - 18.10.14

Michael Zavros | Bad Dad

02.06.14 - 28.06.14

THE ANALYSIS OF BILLY APPLE®

05.05.14 - 10.05.14

Jin Jiangbo, Stella Brennan, Billy Apple, Trenton Garratt, Seung Yul Oh, John Reynolds, Layla Rudneva-Mackay, Jim Speers, Yuk King Tan and Wang Dawei | SIGNALS

08.08.14 - 13.09.14

Layla Rudneva-Mackay | Blue Squares, Purple Pairs

17.03.14 - 12.04.14

Curated by Martin Basher | Lovers

06.02.14 - 06.03.14

Glen Hayward | I don't want you to worry about me

06.12.13 - 31.01.14

Matt Henry | High Fidelity

16.11.13 - 14.12.13

Li Xiaofei | Assembly Line - Entrance

03.10.13 - 26.10.13

Richard Maloy | All the things I did

04.09.13 - 30.09.13

John Reynolds | Vagabondage

22.08.13 - 21.09.13

Clinton Watkins | Frequency Colour

25.07.13 - 16.08.13

Curated by Robert Leonard | BAZINGA!

11.05.13 - 08.06.13

Whitney Bedford | This for That

09.04.13 - 04.05.13

Jin Jiangbo | Rules of Nature

08.03.13 - 04.04.13

Martin Basher | Solo Exhibition

05.02.2013 - 02.03.13

Ross Manning | Field Emissions

29.11.12 - 22.12.12, 15.01.13 - 22.01.13

Seung Yul Oh | HUGGONG

23.10.12 - 17.11.12

Jae Hoon Lee | Antarctic Fever

18.09.12 - 13.10.12

Curated by Brian Butler | Greetings from Los Angeles: Eight Artists

10.07.12 - 06.08.12