Enjoy
Blog
Here you’ll find interviews with artists, reading lists and more. Contributed by Enjoy’s interns, staff, artists and friends.
Gallery Girls....
Posted on October 11, 2012
by Julia Lomas
Though only two of the show's stars actually work in what can truthfully be described as a "gallery", and "art" makes but peripheral, fleeting cameos, Gallery Girls has been occupying my waking and working thoughts lately.
Boundless Energy: Ashlin Raymond and Zhoe Granger
Posted on September 12, 2012
by Tim Gentles
There is a lot going on between the three separate works that make up Zhoe Granger and Ashlin Raymond’s Boundless Energy exhibition. The show edges toward a substantive and very Now critique of cultural autonomy and authenticity, while simultaneously engaging with the complexities of having such a discussion in the context of a scene of young Auckland artists.
Our Film Festival Pick: We Feel Fine
Posted on August 9, 2012
The weather is particularly awful today, and this moves me to suggest a film. Adam Luxton, who just arrived back from Berlin, has a film showing tonight in the Festival. The gallery Hopkinson Cundy features in a few scenes, and the film uses my "dire and damp concrete jungle" (thank you Paula Booker for that great quote!) of a hometown, AK City, for its backdrop. There are also some great cameos from local artists and musicians.
Possible Composition: The 18th Sydney Biennale
Posted on July 26, 2012
by Emily Goldthorpe
At the Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney, the personal and the collective is brought together in an exhibition titled Possible Composition as part of the 2012 Biennale of Sydney. All Our Relations, the eighteenth Sydney Biennale, “focuses on inclusionary practices of generative thinking, such as collaboration, conversation and compassion, in the face of coercion and destruction.”
The Daryl Hannah Experiment
Posted on June 4, 2012
by Megan Dunn
- SCENE 1 -
An Interview with Raewyn Martyn
Posted on February 17, 2011
Raewyn Martyn in conversation with Simon Morris and Erica Van Zon
Transcribed by Duncan McNaughton