John Key’s insightful cultural comment up there with George W Bush
History is not on the Prime Minister’s side when it comes to the All Blacks vs... [more]
Heritage houses in Auckland continue to be demolished, despite a promise from Len Brown. [more]
History is not on the Prime Minister’s side when it comes to the All Blacks vs... [more]
Considering the role the visual arts have played in shaping our and the world’s view of these skinny islands since someone handy with a pen bumped into them in 1642, we have been remarkably stingy in recognising its practitioners. In all that time, we have honoured them with three knighthoods,... [more]
A disclosure: I chair a working party of a bunch of museum professionals, with an eminent architect thrown in, who are making a case for exhibition space on the Auckland waterfront for the national collections.
Other than to note that there is ample precedent for that – Britain’s Tate has four... [more]
At the end of October, with a well- deserved ra-ra, Christchurch restored shopping therapy to its munted CBD with an ingenious collection of shops in Cashel Mall constructed from containers. The only dissenting voice was a pusillanimous Brit who claimed to have invented container shopping malls and threatened to sue.
Given... [more]
Conventional wisdom puts the world’s population of New Zealanders at five million with about four million of them living at home. Those who are absent turn up in the most surprising occupations and countries. It should be a matter of pride that so many who were born here enrich the... [more]
A Ministry for Culture and Heritage map by Jason Smith is a rational tool for cultural planning. [more]
It is an inevitable subtext to the life of a curmudgeon that things are never as good as they used to be. Annoyingly, very occasionally, things do not turn out as neatly as that. Sometimes things are not as good as they once were because they are a great deal... [more]
The Wynyard Quarter is a genuinely public place, thank goodness. [more]
The brilliant Gap Filler scheme is a simple idea and a dashing metaphor for cultural recovery in Christchurch. [more]
Wai 262 might turn out to have more lethal fish hooks than te waka a Maui. [more]
[caption id="attachment_25224" align="alignright" width="192" caption="Natalie Stamilla with her Michael Jones sculpture"][/caption]
Into each town some kitsch must fall. A sad fact of public art. A clumsy word is kitsch. We may not know much about art, but we should know corn when we see it: mock heroism, counterfeit emotions, muddled classical... [more]
When the seventh formers of Fairfield College, Hamilton, armed with buckets of weed killer, scampered around their school grounds one weekend in 2009, decorating it with giant phalluses, they had no idea they were adding to a small but select collection of terrestrial glyphs. A passing Google satellite added their... [more]
Down the rabbit hole of funding application forms. [more]
If the Government can spare $36 million for the America’s Cup, how about $14 million more for this showcase? [more]
It was inevitable that, sooner or later in any intelligent discussion of cultural recovery for Christchurch, London’s Barbican Centre would raise its brutish head. More than once voted London’s ugliest building, this towering monument to British brutalism is both a model and a warning. A massive performing arts centre –... [more]