past event

Art/Action: A Conversation with Dieneke Jansen and Heleyni Pratley

Saturday 10 Aug 2024
1:00pm

Dieneke Jansen, This Housing Thing, 2021. Film still. Commissioned by The Physics Room.

Dieneke Jansen, This Housing Thing, 2021. Film still. Commissioned by The Physics Room.

View event on Facebook

What role does art play in social practice? When is it necessary to make an artwork and when to take direct action?

Join us for a discussion between artists Dieneke Jansen, Heleyni Pratley and Homing Instinct curator and director of CIRCUIT, Mark Williams. The two will discuss Jansen's film This Housing Thing (2021), Pratley's painting and music work and their strategies for using art to investigate the mechanics of capital and as a tool for social justice.

Dieneke Jansen is an artist based Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland, who works with lens-based documentary and social practice. Jansen's practice engages with tensions between site-responsive interventions, performative actions and lens-based documentary practices, and works with community to productively challenge inequality. Projects such as Dwelling on the Stoep, Jakarta Biennale, 2015, and Te Wai Ngutu Kākā Gallery (then St Paul St Gallery), Tāmaki Makaurau, 2016; working with the Tāmaki Housing Group on exhibitions G.I. Areas A & B, 2015, and 90 DAYS+, 2018, Te Tuhi, Pakuranga), and Backdoor Doorbell Studio, Artspace Aotearoa, Tāmaki Makaurau, 2022, inform her current work, which focuses on the social dimensions of lens-based practice with inner-city residents in Tāmaki Makuarau.


Heleyni Pratley is a Pōneke based Aotearoa/Greek/Cypriot conceptual artist working in video, drawing, painting, sculpture, and performance. The core concepts of her work question the mechanics of capitalism and how it shapes and determines what we value. In addition to her art practice, Pratley campaigns for social change, having worked as a Union organiser for fast food and Zero Hour contract workers. She is currently active in local housing and climate change movements. Heleyni and her sister Marika Pratley were the recipients of the inaugural Pyramid Club and Museums Wellington Thomas King Observatory Sound Residency in 2021. She is currently working on A Work About The Housing Crisis With An Indoor Outdoor Flow presented with support from Urban Dream Brokerage and Letting Space. She is a founding member of the Eye Gum music collective, curating and producing the Great Sounds Great and Welcome To Nowhere music festivals.