Showing posts with label Kahikatea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kahikatea. Show all posts

Thursday, 2 June 2022

Artful Narratives and the Angela Morton Room Special Collection

"Lost Forests of the Plains II" by Toni Hartill

 

An acquisition...



"Lost Forests of the Plains II"


2018
Cascade structure
Linocut, stitching



 I am so thrilled and incredibly honoured that this piece, as exhibited in my solo exhibition Artful Narratives,  has been purchased by Auckland Libraries to be added to the Angela Morton Room special collection

 I wish to extend my heartfelt thanks to Leanne Radojkovich (research librarian) for her immense support and encouragement in enabling me to present my exhibition Artful Narratives in the "perfect" setting that is the Angela Morton Room. There is a huge amount of work that goes on behind the scenes in presenting such an exhibition, and Leanne has been both my guiding light and my rock in helping me navigate my way through completely new waters (for me.)





This work attempts to convey the ghostly kahikatea remnants of the Hauraki Plains.


The kahikatea tree now only occurs as forest fragments. Once our tallest tree and an ancient survivor from the Jurassic period, they once dominated the forests that covered the swampy lowland areas of Aotearoa New Zealand. Unfortunately, this land, once drained, was perfect fertile farmland and so the trees were cleared in great swathes to make room for dairying and the timber was discovered to be perfect for boxes to ship butter to the UK. A hive of activity saw the kahikatea forests reduced by 63% in the peak period of 1909 – 1917. It is estimated that more than 98% of pre-European kahikatea has now been lost nationwide.




To read an earlier post about the origins of this and other works in this series, click HERE.

Also search "Kahikatea" in the search bar in the right hand column for further posts.




"Lost Forests of the Plains II" by Toni Hartill (Detail)

"Lost Forests of the Plains II" by Toni Hartill (Detail)

"Lost Forests of the Plains II" by Toni Hartill (Detail)

"Lost Forests of the Plains II" as seen in Artful Narratives by Toni Hartill 

"Lost Forests of the Plains II" as seen in Artful Narratives by Toni Hartill 

"Lost Forests of the Plains II" as seen in Artful Narratives by Toni Hartill 





"Lost Forests of the Plains II" in it's new archival box






and in sincere appreciation, a GIFT!



It has been such an honour and a pleasure to exhibit " Artful Narratives," 
my extensive body of works of artist's books and sculptural artworks, 
in the Angela Morton Room at Takapuna Library, Auckland, New Zealand.

In sincere appreciation, for the opportunities provided to me, and for the ongoing and unwavering support from Leanne Radojkovich, Research Librarian of the Angela Morton Room, and Auckland Libraries, I have created this memento box for the special collection archive room.






Artful Narratives Memento Box

This box and contents have been specially created to gift to the Angela Morton Room Archive, on completion of my exhibition, in sincere appreciation for the opportunities provided to me by Leanne Radojkovich and the AM Room. The box comes in an ochre linen drawstring bag. The box is covered and lined with hand-printed papers, printed by myself using various printmaking techniques. The contents includes: flyers, including for the cancelled dates due to Covid, a catalogue and business card plus a selection of pieces from the exhibition, and samplers, tests, or scraps from the making of pieces in the exhibition.


“Field Notes – Manawa”  

2018, Concertina book. Drypoint, collagraph, watercolour, edition of 3/3


“Logbook: Ngunguru River”

2016, Stitched book. Drypoint, monoprint, watercolour, collagraph, stitching, edition 3/3.


“In Residence, In Residence”

2020, Gateway and Inside/Outside Folding Box, Inkjet on light card.


Samplers from the making of “The Butter Book” 

2019, Coptic stitched book, linocut, collagraph, digital.


Samplers from the making of “Once a Grand and Noble Forest…”

2019, Linocut, collagraph, digital


Artist’s tools from the “Artist’s Toolkits” series 

2021, drypoint, watercolour, collagraph.


Sealed, transparent envelope of “Scraps” from the making of various pieces in the exhibition.



Artful Narratives Memento Box by Toni Hartill


Artful Narratives Memento Box by Toni Hartill


Artful Narratives Memento Box by Toni Hartill


Artful Narratives Memento Box by Toni Hartill


Artful Narratives Memento Box by Toni Hartill

"Logbook: Ngunguru River", 3/3





This memento box has been such a pleasure to put together! 

It will be housed in the special archive, 

available to be exhibited in the future in the Angela Morton Room 

and to be viewed by request.



Ngā mihi nui Leanne and Auckland Libraries.



"Lost Forests of the Plains II" and the
Memento box in the AM archive room







Monday, 21 March 2022

Heritage et Al Blog - Artful Narratives and the destruction of the kahikatea forests

 





Heritage et Al is a blogsite which features unique collections and resources from Auckland Libraries research centres and heritage collections. This is an amazing resource and I hope you will take the opportunity to explore all that it has to offer.

I am so grateful to have had my article published about my body of work created in response to my own research done on the destruction of the kahikatea forests of Aotearoa New Zealand.

You can read my blog on Heritage et Al HERE.

This is a topic I became very passionate about, the more I researched it, and I continue to feel it is important to share this little known history of our country so that we will treasure and protect the remnants we still have, as sparse and threatened as they may be.



This body of work will feature in my solo exhibition 

Artful Narratives 

2 April - 2 June, 2022


Angela Morton Room, 

Level 1,

Takapuna Library,

Auckland, NZ.


SCROLL DOWN for news about ARTIST'S TALKS!





I have written about some of these works in numerous earlier blogs 

some of which you can revisit below 

where you will also find additional links:






Artist's Book: A Buttery Demise

The making of the Butter Book and the research behind it's creation.





Imagined Journeys through Lost Landscapes

The making of these meander books and the research that informed their creation.





Long Live the Kahikatea!

Photographs of kahikatea remnants from road trips north 

and south and where my research began. 




ARTISTS TALKS


I will be presenting a number of artist's talks during my exhibition.

Dates have now been set for April!


Thursday 7th April

Friday 22 April


Please arrive early

I will be onsite from 10.30am

Talks start at 11am


Dates for May will be announced nearer the time.

I hope you will be able to join me!






Stay tuned for further updates!


Friday, 19 July 2019

Imagined Journeys through Lost Landscapes - I, II, III


Lost Landscape Meander Books by Toni Hartill



Artist's Statement:

Imagined Journeys through Lost Landscapes I, II, III 

Imaginary journeys through the lost landscapes that once were the swamps of the Hauraki Plains. It is estimated that more than 98% of pre-European Kahikatea has been lost nationwide and now only occurs as forest fragments. Since researching our nation’s history regarding the demise of our pre-European landscapes I feel bereft for all we have lost and I fear for what we continue to lose.






Lost Landscape Meander Books by Toni Hartill

The making of the books


These books came about through play. 
And through a desire to paint rather than print. 

You may know that I was primarily a painter that has got way-laid by the lure of printmaking and I often, and always, long to paint again. These wee books were joyous to create: playing with paint, zoning out in the moment with wet-in-wet, colour and composition...

The structure of the books is known by various names including Snake Book, Meander Book, Accordion Book... My preference in this case is the Meander book as it suits the idea of a journey quite aptly.

They began with very loose watercolour paintings on both sides of heavy watercolour paper. I very much had ideas of imagery in my head (my imagined landscapes) and an idea of how the large sheet would actually read as many smaller pages within the books.

The boxes are made using a simple origami pattern folded into a box with a matching fitted lid. 

The paper for the boxes is antiqued and printed with text from an article, written by a descendant of the Bagnall brothers who ran a mill on the banks of the Waihou River at Turua, Hauraki Plains. There they milled Kahikatea trees to be made into butter boxes. The descendant expresses regret for their family’s part in the destruction of the forest as they describe the “men with axe and saw, slashing their way into the doomed bush… It was the beginning of the end for many of the feathered world that inhabited its depths… The massive trunks came faster and faster… but a grand and noble forest lay dying.”
 
Le Baigneau, “Where the Village Slew the Forest”, NZ Herald, 24 April 1937.





Refer also to:




EnvirohistoryNZ: The slaying of our kahikatea forests: how Jurassic giants became butter boxes







Watercolour paintings













 The finished painted surfaces








 Gridding up and cutting







 The joy of 3D forms









 Turning the pages to discover the mini landscapes within
















Imagined Journeys through Lost Landscapes I, II, III 

Watercolour accordion books within origami boxes

Unique

by Toni Hartill

Small x2: 60 x 60 x 30mm I, II

Large x1: 80 x 80 x 40mm III










These books are exhibited, as part of a larger body of work 
 inspired by the loss of the Kahikatea forests of NZ, 
in the Forest has the Blues - Murmurings exhibition 
 at the Steel Gallery, Franklin Arts Centre, Pukekohe.

Opens Saturday 20th July, 10.30am.
Artist talk: 11.15am.

Exhibition: 20 July - 24 August, 2019.




View other books in my Artist Books tab.


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Thursday, 6 June 2019

Forest has the Blues, 2019 - a sneaky peek at my exhibition works


 


 Forest has the Blues is an ecologically themed group project, initiated by Celia Walker. 
Last year we exhibited a large scale print installation and accompanying exhibition of works
at the Depot Artspace in Devonport, followed by a smaller installation at the Auckland Botanic Gardens. To view earlier posts click on the "Forest has the Blues" link in the right hand column under "Exhibitions". To specifically view our installation at the Depot Artspace including closeups of our exhibition works click HERE.



Forest has the Blues, 2018, Depot Artspace, Auckland.

 This year we are presenting a new version of our "forest" in the Steel Gallery at Franklin Arts Centre, Pukekohe. This time we are going even bigger with 2 large installation components plus an exhibition of individual works by the seven participating artists Celia Walker, Toni Hartill, Elle Anderson, Nicola Ov, Kheang Ov, Esther Hansen and Rachel Schanzer (plus some of Ina Arraoui's installation works from last year as she is currently overseas). This year we are also including 2 groups of senior students, one from Pukekohe High School and the other from Westlake Girls High School. The students are using their involvement to contribute towards credits for their NCEA assessments.



NZ Kauri snails, mothplant and misc monoprints by Toni Hartill

NZ Clematis by Toni Hartill



Aside from a large amount of work I will contribute to the installation, my contribution to the exhibition this year will include quite a substantial body of work I have gathered together over the past year, all again themed on the disappearance of the once mighty Kahikatea forests of New Zealand, particularly of the Northland and Waikato regions. I will be exhibiting a new series of multi-layered works which include lino printing, monoprinting and stitching. These works are similar to ones that I presented at last year's exhibition and which proved to be so popular - a great relief as they are/were of an entirely experimental nature and not the usual way in which printmaking is presented! Thankfully this didn't seem to put people off, in fact all but one of my works from last year sold. One purchaser even went so far as to have one of the large multi-layered panels beautifully framed.


















I will also have the opportunity to exhibit some of my artists books, again themed closely to the disappearance of the Kahikatea forests. This is a part of New Zealand's history I never really knew about until I began researching for this exhibition last year and it is now very embedded in my heart as one of the many great tragedies of our natural environment.



"Once a Grand & Nobel Forest..." artist book by Toni Hartill


"Imagined Journeys through lost landscapes I, II, III" artists books by Toni Hartill


"A Buttery Demise" artist book by Toni Hartill



Forest has the Blues
opens at Franklin Arts Centre,
Pukekohe

Saturday 20th July, 10.30am.

Artists' talk:
Participating artists will be doing 
an artists' talk in the gallery at 11.15am 
to discuss some of the processes 
used in creating this enormous body of work. 

All welcome!


Stay tuned for updates 
by following our facebook page



Thanks for visiting!