Back to top

Artist Talks: Jade Townsend and Matthew Galloway

ArtNow Floor Talk Jade and Matt 2000 x 1333

Jade Townsend (image courtesy of Season and taken by Samuel Hartnett) and Matthew Galloway (courtesy of the artist).

Artist Talks: Jade Townsend and Matthew Galloway | Saturday 9 December at 11am

Jade Townsend and Matthew Galloway, the artists behind two new exhibitions at the gallery, will share insights about their work in a joint floor talk, followed by refreshments. Free, no booking required. 

Jade will discuss the thinking behind He Whare Ātaahua, her installation which combines different traditions of painting, adornment, and decoration. She will talk about the process of painting directly onto the gallery walls, responding to the architecture and important influences, including her father’s work as a sign-writer and John Hovell’s wharekai at Te Aute college.

Matthew will discuss the links between his new work, Empty Vessels, and Mohamed Sleiman Labat’s film Desert Narratives. Exploring the shifting political grounds of global food production, Galloway and Sleiman Labat, who have had ongoing correspondence since meeting in 2016, present different perspectives on Aotearoa’s reliance on phosphate rock from Western Sahara, used to make fertiliser.

 

Jade Townsend (Ngāti Kahungunu, Te Ātihaunui-a-Pāpārangi, Pākehā, British), lives and works in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland. Her work often draws from the different parts of her own heritage, in conversation with contemporary Māori painting and aesthetics. Born and raised in Whanganui, she moved to Liverpool as a teenager, where she became interested in accents, dialects, regional slang, folktales, and pūrākau. Townsend returned to Aotearoa in her mid-twenties, after studying at the Manchester School of Art and continues to exhibit nationally and internationally.

Matthew Galloway lives and works in Te Whanganui-a-Tara Wellington. His research-based practice employs the tools and methodologies of graphic design, often within a gallery context. This way of working emphasises design and publishing as an inherently political exercise. Matthew has exhibited widely in Aotearoa and well as internationally, and often works collaboratively to draw attention to environmental and social politics.

 

Back to Past events

Gallery Hours

Opening hours
Monday to Friday, 10am – 4.30pm
Saturday, 10am - 4pm
Sunday, 1pm - 4pm

Free Entry

Subscribe

Fill out my online form.

Contact Us

Hastings City Art Gallery Map

© 2024 Hastings City Art Gallery

Disclaimers and Copyright
While every endeavour has been taken by the Hastings City Art Gallery to ensure that the information on this website is accurate and up to date, Hastings City Art Gallery shall not be liable for any loss suffered through the use, directly or indirectly, of information on this website. Information contained has been assembled in good faith. Some of the information available in this site is from the New Zealand Public domain and supplied by relevant government agencies. Hastings City Art Gallery cannot accept any liability for its accuracy or content. Portions of the information and material on this site, including data, pages, documents, online graphics and images are protected by copyright, unless specifically notified to the contrary. Externally sourced information or material is copyright to the respective provider.

© Hastings City Art Gallery - www.hastingscityartgallery.co.nz / +64 6 8715095 / hastingsartgallery@hdc.govt.nz