The Light Horizon

The Light Horizon exhibition draws on photographs taken during my two weeks on the Ice as an Antarctic Artist’s Fellow, Dec. 2005. The show was significant for its scale and scope – 40 digital photo collage works, and lenticular prints, from eight different series. It represents the culmination of m...

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Main Author: Jenkinson, ML
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2292/17522
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description The Light Horizon exhibition draws on photographs taken during my two weeks on the Ice as an Antarctic Artist’s Fellow, Dec. 2005. The show was significant for its scale and scope – 40 digital photo collage works, and lenticular prints, from eight different series. It represents the culmination of my most significant research outputs from the ‘Antarctica’ project to date and included works selected from the exhibitions The Dark Continent, Jonathan Smart Gallery, Christchurch, Jun-July 2007, and The Weight of Water, Mark Hutchins Gallery, Wellington, Sept 2007. This exhibition occupied both the downstairs and upstairs galleries at Two Rooms, one of New Zealand’s leading galleries. [583] Commentary: This research acknowledges Antarctica as a complex site that cannot be summed up in one particular artistic approach. The images I produced represent a major departure from my previous photographic practice and constitute a range of approaches differing considerably from the majority of photography undertaken on the Continent. In my work landscape was the starting point for a series of meditations on Antarctica’s heroic age of exploration, Antarctica as a place of speculation and wonder, a site of scientific study and more recently commercial speculation. Digital montage enabled me to overlay past and present, the scientific and cultural, while the visual trickery of the lenticular process (first used in The Dark Continent, 2007) provided further conceptual shifts, emphasizing the uncertainty and instability of the landscapes in view. Virginia Were in Volatile Imaginings, Art News New Zealand, Winter 2008, wrote: “Megan Jenkinson’s visit to Antarctica has spawned an extraordinary series of photographs, which present a post-romantic view of our engagement with nature’… ‘[her work is] like an extended love poem to a place she found both confounding and inspiring’… ‘Jenkinson’s photographic montages are brilliant evocations of these atmospheric phenomena [auroras and mirages], visual tricks from the imagination of this acclaimed artist’. Reviewed in The NZ Herald and 5 works collected by Te Papa Tongarewa. [1,214] • Part of the Auckland Festival of Photography, 2008, receiving additional public exposure as a result. • Five Works collected by the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Wellington. • Volatile Imaginings’, Artist’s Profile, Art News, New Zealand, Winter, 2008, pages 72 – 75. • Adam Gifford, ‘Changing View of a Frozen Land,’ review, in the New Zealand Herald, illustrated, 20.5.09 • Sharu Delilkan, ‘Trick of the Light,’ review in The Aucklander, illustrated, 7.5.08 • Gallery Talk on the exhibition, Two Rooms (in connection with the 2008 Auckland Festival of Photography), 11.6.08 • Gallery talk to members of the Paradise Art Group. • The exhibition was advertised in the following: Art News, New Zealand, Winter 2008 (full page colour advertisement); Art Zone April/June 2008 (full page); and the Auckland Readers and Writers Festival ’08 booklet (1/3 page). • “I was horrified by the Brilliance of your work. My jaw dropped open as I tried to comprehend how you achieved it all.” (Email from Greta Anderson, ex student and tutor at Elam).
format Other/Unknown Material
author Jenkinson, ML
spellingShingle Jenkinson, ML
The Light Horizon
author_facet Jenkinson, ML
author_sort Jenkinson, ML
title The Light Horizon
title_short The Light Horizon
title_full The Light Horizon
title_fullStr The Light Horizon
title_full_unstemmed The Light Horizon
title_sort light horizon
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2292/17522
op_coverage Two Rooms Gallery, Auckland
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op_source http://tworooms.co.nz/artists/megan-jenkinson/exhibitions/
op_rights Items in ResearchSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated. Previously published items are made available in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.
https://researchspace.auckland.ac.nz/docs/uoa-docs/rights.htm
Copyright: The Authors
http://purl.org/eprint/accessRights/RestrictedAccess
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spelling ftunivauckland:oai:researchspace.auckland.ac.nz:2292/17522 2023-05-15T13:58:52+02:00 The Light Horizon Jenkinson, ML Two Rooms Gallery, Auckland 2008 40 Digital Ultrachrome collage prints and digital lenticular prints http://hdl.handle.net/2292/17522 unknown Items in ResearchSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated. Previously published items are made available in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. https://researchspace.auckland.ac.nz/docs/uoa-docs/rights.htm Copyright: The Authors http://purl.org/eprint/accessRights/RestrictedAccess http://tworooms.co.nz/artists/megan-jenkinson/exhibitions/ Creative Work 2008 ftunivauckland 2013-12-07T09:57:38Z The Light Horizon exhibition draws on photographs taken during my two weeks on the Ice as an Antarctic Artist’s Fellow, Dec. 2005. The show was significant for its scale and scope – 40 digital photo collage works, and lenticular prints, from eight different series. It represents the culmination of my most significant research outputs from the ‘Antarctica’ project to date and included works selected from the exhibitions The Dark Continent, Jonathan Smart Gallery, Christchurch, Jun-July 2007, and The Weight of Water, Mark Hutchins Gallery, Wellington, Sept 2007. This exhibition occupied both the downstairs and upstairs galleries at Two Rooms, one of New Zealand’s leading galleries. [583] Commentary: This research acknowledges Antarctica as a complex site that cannot be summed up in one particular artistic approach. The images I produced represent a major departure from my previous photographic practice and constitute a range of approaches differing considerably from the majority of photography undertaken on the Continent. In my work landscape was the starting point for a series of meditations on Antarctica’s heroic age of exploration, Antarctica as a place of speculation and wonder, a site of scientific study and more recently commercial speculation. Digital montage enabled me to overlay past and present, the scientific and cultural, while the visual trickery of the lenticular process (first used in The Dark Continent, 2007) provided further conceptual shifts, emphasizing the uncertainty and instability of the landscapes in view. Virginia Were in Volatile Imaginings, Art News New Zealand, Winter 2008, wrote: “Megan Jenkinson’s visit to Antarctica has spawned an extraordinary series of photographs, which present a post-romantic view of our engagement with nature’… ‘[her work is] like an extended love poem to a place she found both confounding and inspiring’… ‘Jenkinson’s photographic montages are brilliant evocations of these atmospheric phenomena [auroras and mirages], visual tricks from the imagination of this acclaimed artist’. Reviewed in The NZ Herald and 5 works collected by Te Papa Tongarewa. [1,214] • Part of the Auckland Festival of Photography, 2008, receiving additional public exposure as a result. • Five Works collected by the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Wellington. • Volatile Imaginings’, Artist’s Profile, Art News, New Zealand, Winter, 2008, pages 72 – 75. • Adam Gifford, ‘Changing View of a Frozen Land,’ review, in the New Zealand Herald, illustrated, 20.5.09 • Sharu Delilkan, ‘Trick of the Light,’ review in The Aucklander, illustrated, 7.5.08 • Gallery Talk on the exhibition, Two Rooms (in connection with the 2008 Auckland Festival of Photography), 11.6.08 • Gallery talk to members of the Paradise Art Group. • The exhibition was advertised in the following: Art News, New Zealand, Winter 2008 (full page colour advertisement); Art Zone April/June 2008 (full page); and the Auckland Readers and Writers Festival ’08 booklet (1/3 page). • “I was horrified by the Brilliance of your work. My jaw dropped open as I tried to comprehend how you achieved it all.” (Email from Greta Anderson, ex student and tutor at Elam). Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica University of Auckland Research Repository - ResearchSpace Antarctic Christchurch ENVELOPE(164.167,164.167,-82.467,-82.467) Mirages ENVELOPE(141.446,141.446,-66.797,-66.797) New Zealand