Exhibition | and with his kiss i became a braided river, Wesley John Fourie
About the event
Waitaha Canterbury contains nearly sixty-four percent of the braided rivers found in Aotearoa New Zealand. Their dynamics are still being understood, but what is clear is that the visible course of a braided river is only one element of its entirety.
Wesley John Fourie, based in Ĺtepoti Dunedin, works across multiple media, including ceramics, video, photography and textiles. One element of Fourie’s practice is the production of hand-knitted scale models of rivers, including Te Awa Tupua Whanganui River and the Murray River in Australia. Here, a series of works explore ideas of love, labour, the natural world, spirituality and time.
The central work, the first day of my life as a braided river, is a total of 2100 metres of finger knitting that mimics at 1/100 scale the branches of Whakatere Ashburton river. The entanglement of yarn is a visual analogy for the river’s multiple channels of water. Made over three years, and existing in three-dimensions, the work is an accumulation of time – in the labour involved in working the yarn – that reflects the life of a river at human scale.
Join us for the opening of this exhibition on Saturday 14 December at 6pm. This will coincide with the opening of Michael Greaves’ exhibition Falling If Not Flying.
Image | Wesley John Fourie, the first day of my life as a braided river (detail), 2021-2024, 2100m of knitting, mixed media.
15th Dec 2024 - 21st Feb 2025
Opening event | Saturday 14 December, 6pm
Ashburton Art Gallery
Admission: FREE