Image courtesy of the artist.

Bouquet Eleanor Cooper

6 March 2020 - 13 June 2020

Opening event: Thursday 5 March at 5.30pm
Artist talk: Friday 6 March at 12 noon
Free to attend, all welcome

The Blue Oyster Art Project Space is pleased to present a solo exhibition by Auckland-based artist Eleanor Cooper.

Cooper’s work often articulates aspects of landscape neglected by Western traditions of the scenic and picturesque. In doing so, it seeks to recreate landscape as a rich terrain of sensory experience, narrative and belonging.

Drawing on personal experiences as a field ranger in nature reserves, Bouquet presents new sculptures and photographs that recollect first-hand encounters, traces of human interaction and ecological findings. Delving into various pockets of land managed by the Department of Conservation––including the “earthly paradise” of Sir George Grey on Kawau Island and the marine mammal breeding grounds in the Subantarctic Islands––this project illuminates some of the beliefs and cultural imperatives that have both produced and upheld the conservation estate in Aotearoa.[1]

Eleanor Cooper is an artist, writer and field ranger for the Department of Conservation. In 2019 she completed the MFA programme at the University of Auckland, where she graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts (Honours) and Bachelor of Arts (Philosophy) in 2012. She has exhibited widely within Aotearoa including at City Gallery Wellington, Hastings City Art Gallery, Mokopōpaki, Artspace, Split/Fountain, RM Gallery, The Physics Room and Objectspace, as well as providing written contributions to a number of publications including Argos Aotearoa and the recently published Pipi Press publication In Common.

All artworks courtesy the artist and Mokopōpaki, Auckland. 

View the exhibition roomsheet, designed and printed by POINT.
Read Eleanor Cooper in conversation with Hope Wilson here.

Bouquet is presented as part of the 2020 Dunedin Fringe Festival programme.

DFF Fringe One Line Black2


[1] Yarwood, Vaughan. “The Governor’s Island.” New Zealand Geographic. 39 (Jul–Sept 1998), http://www.nzgeo.com/stories/the-governors-island/