隔离室:Michael Parekowhai的《灯塔:tki Whenua-a - Kura》

IF 0.2 4区 艺术学 0 ARCHITECTURE Interiors-Design Architecture Culture Pub Date : 2021-07-27 DOI:10.1080/20419112.2021.1938832
Rachel Carley
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引用次数: 0

摘要

3月25日星期三11时59分 2020年下午,总理杰辛达·阿德恩(Jacinda Ardern)封锁了Aotearoa(新西兰),以保护公民免受新冠肺炎全球大流行的灾难性影响。整个家庭都被隔离,只允许在当地旅行以获得食物或医疗用品。媒体传达的信息非常明确:待在家里。这一当代背景有助于对雕塑家迈克尔·帕雷科海的《灯塔:TúWhenua-a-Kura》(2017)进行分析,这是一个国家大厦建筑类型的全尺寸模型。州议会被誉为奥特亚对平等主义原则的持续承诺的象征。它们于20世纪30年代在迈克尔·约瑟夫·萨维奇的工党政府领导下首次生产,旨在为那些买不起自己房子的人提供住房。然而,近年来,这种形式的社会住房,特别是那些有机会获得社会住房的人,一直是激烈政治辩论的主题。目前的住房短缺加剧了问题,因为住宿成本的指数级增长与该市无家可归者人数的增加同时发生。这些发展使得帕雷科海的公共雕塑特别及时。这座雕塑位于Tāmaki Makaurau(奥克兰)Waitematā港皇后码头的终点站,里面有一个单间和一个人:18世纪的英国探险家詹姆斯·库克船长。他体型比真人还大,举止忏悔。库克的英雄遗产受到了修正主义历史学家和毛利学者的质疑,他们发现殖民主义对土著社区产生了并将继续产生大量负面影响。库克现在被软禁在一个典型的州议会中,似乎在反思自己的行为。本文探讨了这位艺术家是如何努力将这种住房类型重塑为一块优质房地产上的灯塔的。雕塑挑衅性的内部内容掩盖了对外部形式的熟悉,艺术家操纵了一套精心制作的具象和抽象形式,通过一系列令人眼花缭乱的表面处理来揭示我们殖民历史中令人不安的方面,以及在奥特亚获得土地和住房的机会。在这里,在码头的尽头,我们失去了立足点;我们必须考虑我们的立场与我们的殖民历史以及我们与whenua(土地)的当代关系。随着灾难性事件在全球舞台上的展开,让我们都转向了我们的国内内饰,支撑《灯塔:TúWhenua-a-Kura》的概念思想让人们思考现在在奥特亚呆在家里意味着什么。
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Isolation Room: Michael Parekowhai’s The Lighthouse: Tū Whenua-a Kura
On Wednesday, March 25 at 11.59 pm, 2020, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern placed Aotearoa (New Zealand) into lockdown to shelter citizens from the catastrophic impacts of the Covid-19 global pandemic. Entire households were placed in isolation, permitted only to travel locally to access food or medical supplies. The media messaging was resoundingly clear: stay at home. This contemporary context contributes to an analysis of sculptor Michael Parekowhai’s The Lighthouse: Tū Whenua-a-Kura (2017), a full-scale model of a State House building typology. State Houses have been lauded as symbols of Aotearoa’s ongoing commitment to the principles of egalitarianism. First produced in the 1930s under the leadership of Michael Joseph Savage’s Labour government, they were intended to house those unable to afford their own homes. However, in recent years this form of social housing and, in particular, those who have access to it have been the subject of vociferous political debate. A current housing shortage has exacerbated matters as exponential increases in accommodation costs have coincided with increases in homeless numbers in the city. These developments make Parekowhai's public sculpture particularly timely. Sited at the terminus of Queens Wharf on the Waitematā Harbour in Tāmaki Makaurau (Auckland), the sculpture contains a single room and a single man: the eighteenth-century English explorer Captain James Cook. He is larger than life-size and adopts a penitent deportment. Cook's heroic legacy has been questioned by revisionist historians and Māori scholars who have identified a plethora of negative impacts colonization had and continues to have on indigenous communities. Cook is now under house arrest, quarantined in a prototypical State House, appearing to reflect on his actions. This paper examines how the artist assiduously reinvents this housing typology as a beacon on a prime piece of real estate. The familiarity of the exterior form is belied by the sculpture's provocative interior contents, where the artist manipulates an elaborate suite of figurative and abstract forms rendered in an array of dazzling surface treatments to shed light, both literally and metaphorically on troubling aspects of our colonial history and access to the provision of land and housing in Aotearoa. Here, at the end of the wharf, we lose our footing; we have to consider where we stand in relation to our colonial past and our contemporary relationship to whenua (land). As calamitous events unfold on the global stage that make us all turn toward our domestic interiors, the conceptual ideas that underpin The Lighthouse: Tū Whenua-a-Kura make one consider what it means to stay at home now in Aotearoa.
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