James Oram, Untitled, 2011

Play Off Edith Amituanai, Scott Eady, James Oram

23 August 2011 - 1 October 2011

Edith Amituanai, Scott Eady, and James Oram

Rugby has long been a hallmark of New Zealand’s identity, permeating our culture. Art can provide a medium to take a look at ourselves and the things that are important to us, from another angle.

The Blue Oyster, a project space dedicated to facilitating experimentation in art, will soon be presenting its take on rugby. Play Off, the Blue Oyster’s upcoming exhibition as part of the REAL NZ Festival, will engage with questions about the intersections and frictions between art and sport in contemporary New Zealand.

Play Off presents three New Zealand artists - Scott Eady, Edith Amituanai, and James Oram - each providing different angles from which to examine the culture of rugby in New Zealand. The three artists come from various corners of New Zealand and have been chosen for their established practice of exploring themes integral to sport and the national psyche.

Scott Eady is a sculptor currently residing in Dunedin. His sculptural and photographic installation will take a playful look at the mythical status of the All Blacks through a wide-eyed and child-like perspective. Eady is fortunate to be sponsored by Adidas, who have given him 15 All Blacks jerseys to use in his photographs. He will be photographing children wearing the All Blacks jerseys – and his lucky models will get to keep the jerseys after posing for the photographs.

Edith Amituanai’s photography is informed by her Samoan heritage and upbringing in Auckland. Her work in Play Off will focus on the varying roles and impacts of sport in the lives of a wide group of young New Zealanders.

James Oram is a Christchurch-based sculptor who confronts audiences with subverted concepts of competition and masculinity, often mimicking the ritualistic ways in which these ideals are perpetuated.

Play Off is curated by former Blue Oyster Director Jaenine Parkinson and current Director Jamie Hanton.

 

Additional Events during the exhibition

20 September 2011: Artist-Writer Speed Dating in association with OUSA Art Week

21 September 2011: White Night with a performance by Ed Muzik in association with OUSA Art Week

24 September 2011: Discussion Session ‘Fancy Dress Balls and National Identity in Early New Zealand (1900-1910)’ with Dr Natalie Smith

28 September 2011: Closing Function and Discussion 'Intersections between rugby gender and art' with artists Simon Kaan, Bridget Inder and Hannah Joynt