Resetting the Coordinates: An anthology of performance art in Aotearoa New Zealand

Author:   Christopher Braddock ,  Victoria Wynne-Jones ,  Layne Waerea ,  Ioana Gordon-Smith
Publisher:   Massey University Press
ISBN:  

9781991016546


Pages:   392
Publication Date:   12 September 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Resetting the Coordinates: An anthology of performance art in Aotearoa New Zealand


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Overview

The first anthology/reader of performance art of Aotearoa New Zealand, Resetting the Coordinates offers a lively, 50-year critical survey of Aotearoa New Zealand’s globally unique performance art scene.  From the post-object and performance art of the late 1960s to the rich vein of Māori and Pacific performance art from the early 1990s, its 18 chapters by researchers and practitioners is a major reference for art and performance communities of New Zealand, Australia and further afield.  It discusses the influential work of Jim Allen, Phil Dadson, Peter Roche and Linda Buis, performance art initiatives in post-earthquake Christchurch and queer performance art, among many other topics. 

Full Product Details

Author:   Christopher Braddock ,  Victoria Wynne-Jones ,  Layne Waerea ,  Ioana Gordon-Smith
Publisher:   Massey University Press
Imprint:   Massey University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 19.00cm , Height: 4.00cm , Length: 25.00cm
Weight:   0.800kg
ISBN:  

9781991016546


ISBN 10:   1991016549
Pages:   392
Publication Date:   12 September 2024
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction. Resetting the Coordinates Christopher Braddock /9 Chapter 1. A Place, a Question, a Challenge, a Call to Action: Performance in the 1970s Blair French /34 Chapter 2. Kimberley Gray: A case study in the development towards performance, 1970–76 Natasha Conland /54 Chapter 3. Getting It Straight: Contact, 1974 and 2010 Jim Allen & James Charlton /72 Chapter 4. Body Politics: Women and performance in the 1980s Melanie Oliver /88 Chapter 5. The Afterlives of Performance Art: The case of Peter Roche and Linda Buis Christina Barton & Gregory Burke /108 Chapter 6. Sound and Performance Cultures in Aotearoa Rachel Shearer & Andrew Clifford /128 Chapter 7. Curating Performance/Curatorial Performativity: A selected history of curating performance art in Aotearoa 1970–2020 Bruce E. Phillips & Heather Galbraith /150 Chapter 8. Mātauranga Māori and Whakapapa of Change in Performance Art of Aotearoa Layne Waerea /170 Chapter 9. Urban Pasifika and Cold Islanders Ioana Gordon-Smith /188 Chapter 10. Constellations of Subjectivity: Engaging the emergent, adaptive and fluid nature of lived social difference in Māori and Moana performance art Lana Lopesi & Layne Waerea /206 Chapter 11. Either For a Moment or For as Long as Possible Christopher Braddock & Ioana Gordon-Smith /222 Chapter 12. Three Types of Timepass Balamohan Shingade /242 Chapter 13. It’s a Work: Spectacular secrecy in private and unannounced performances Christopher Braddock & Victoria Wynne-Jones /260 Chapter 14. Threads: Musings on queer performance art in Aotearoa Ioana Gordon-Smith & Khye Hitchcock /278 Chapter 15. The Skin of Displaced Event in Aotearoa Performance Art Lisa Samuels /298 Chapter 16. Performance Art in Post-quake Ōtautahi Christchurch Audrey Baldwin & Khye Hitchcock /314 Chapter 17. Cry for Attention: Post-internet performances by Natasha Matila-Smith and Sione Tuívailala Monū Victoria Wynne-Jones & Lana Lopesi /334 Chapter 18. Performing Environments with More-than-Human Whanaunga Janine Randerson & Amanda Yates /348 Glossary of Māori and Pacific terms /372 About the authors /380 Acknowledgements /385 Index /386

Reviews

‘It is a fascinating book with lots of performances which have been rarely written about, seemingly lost to history but which tell us much about the social, political and spiritual examinations and soundings which artists have made.’ – John Daly-Peoples, NZ Arts Review


Author Information

Christopher Braddock, artist and writer, is professor of visual arts in the School of Art & Design, Auckland University of Technology. He is director doctoral studies and co-leads the Art & Performance Research Group. He has written extensively on performance art in Aotearoa. He is author of Performing Contagious Bodies: Ritual participation in contemporary art (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013) and editor of Animism in Art and Performance (Palgrave Macmillan, 2017). His performance and installation works have been included in Public Relations at the Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, curated by Simon Gennard (2022); How to Live Together at ST PAUL St Gallery, curated by Balamohan Shingade (2019); and Material Traces: Time and the gesture in contemporary art, curated by Amelia Jones in Montréal (2013). Key research terms include: animism, dialogue, silence, contagion, material trace, ritual, spirituality, performance and participation. Chris lives in Auckland. See www.christopherbraddock.com Victoria Wynne-Jones, art historian and curator, is an honorary research fellow in art history at the School of Humanities at the University of Auckland. She currently lectures in the disciplinary areas of art history, fine arts and dance studies, and collaborates with artists on written commissions and exhibition-making. Her research focuses on the intersections between dance studies and performance art as well as curatorial practice, feminisms, contemporary art theory and philosophy. She is author of Choreographing Intersubjectivity in Performance Art (Palgrave Macmillan, 2021), part of the series ‘New World Choreographies’. Layne Waerea (Ngāti Wāhiao, Ngāti Kahungunu) is a Tāmaki Makaurau-based artist and educator whose practice involves carrying out performance art interventions that seek to question and challenge social and legal ambiguities in the public sphere. As a former lawyer and lecturer in law, Waerea uses this experience to inform her performance interventions, with a particular focus on how Te Tiriti o Waitangi could continue to play a critical role in the developing cultural fabric of Aotearoa. In 2016 Waerea completed her PhD at Auckland University of Technology, titled ‘Free Social Injunctions: Art interventions as agency in the production of socio-legal subjectivities not yet imagined or realised’. Ioana Gordon-Smith (New Zealand/Sāmoa) is an arts writer and curator. She has held roles at Artspace Aotearoa, Objectspace, Te Uru Waitākere Contemporary Gallery and Pātaka Art + Museum. Gordon-Smith is a co-curator of the international Indigenous triennial Naadohbii: To draw water in Canada, and together with Lana Lopesi is the co-founder and co-editor of Marinade: Aotearoa journal of Moana art. She is a trustee for Enjoy Contemporary Art Space. Consistent throughout her curatorial process is a priority on close working relationships with artists. She lives in Porirua.

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