Details of the artwork for sale in the Houses during the 2024 Art House Tour can be viewed below. Art will be uploaded as artists have it ready, so be sure to check back regularly to see what is available.
All funds raised from the Art House Tour will go towards the Academic Endowment Fund, which was established in 2002. This allows the School to recruit, reward and retain the best possible teachers for the classroom. It also assists through the provision of physical resources and infrastructure.
Only registered ticket holders can buy art in the homes on the day of the Art House Tour. These will not be available to purchase online unless they remain unsold at the end of the Tour. All unsold works will be available for purchase on the website until midnight on Tuesday 26 November 2024.
Australian hardwood, pounamu taonga, oil.
Contemporary Māori Pou (wooden sculptures) with pounamu/jade pendants carved and woven by the artist. With this work, the artist’s hope is to bring awareness to how we all have a role to play in helping to look after our world – to unify and protect land and seas for future generations.
These sculptures are available individually, as a pair or group of three, $6,000 NZD per individual Pou.
This painting was inspired by summer as it captures the essence of the season itself—vibrant colours, warmth, leisure, and nature in full bloom.
Oil on canvas
Bronze on bluestone plinth
Ed 4/7
plinth dimensions 19 x 100cm
Parson Bird is part of a series of works taking a wry look at the nicknames given to New Zealand birds by the early European settlers. The tuft of feathers at the tūī’s throat reminded settlers of the white collar of a minister or parson. Its raucous, sometimes pompous demeanour evoking an enthusiastic sermon. Here the tūī’ delivers his sermon from a giant bible on a precarious lectern.
Courtesy of Föenander galleries.
Andrea Bolima was born in the Philippines and moved to New Zealand in 2007. Andrea graduated with a first class Masters of Visual Art from AUT in 2019 and was a nominee for the Glaister Ennor Graduate Art Award the same year. Recent exhibitions include Prelude 2020, Gow Langsford Gallery and States of Memory and Perception, St. Paul Street Gallery Three, AUT, Dandelion Street, Föenander Galleries (2022), Three emerging female painters at Jhana Millers Gallery. as well as presentation’s at Aotearoa Art Fair in 2021 and 2022.
Andrea’s paintings assert their physical presence but perhaps more importantly, they allow dreamy associations to be made in the paint. Andrea’s paintings sit in an ambiguous zone between abstraction and representation and as such one can find themselves in flux between ‘here’ and ‘there’, in focus and out of focus. Her paintings are led not so much by representation as sensation.
Inspired from memory and the natural world, Andrea paints ambiguous organic forms, areas of paint may resemble cloud currents in a sky scape or leaves and trees in a whimsical garden. Her forms are never explicit. Colour and active gesture spark the feeling of such places without letting go of a painterly materialism and abstract aesthetic. Through colour and form they remind us of unspecific places and moments that are simultaneously personal, private and universal.
For Andrea, colour precedes composition in process, fields of colour are applied before surface textured marks are applied. She will apply and mix colour directly on the canvas and in doing so, creates a site of change from which she can then respond to intuitively. A practice that is characterised by varying degrees of control and lack of control, spontaneity, play and intuition.
Ivon Hitchens, whom Andrea admires, said “The essence of my theory is that colour is space and space is colour”. Andrea too uses the optical qualities of colour in order to create atmospheric space on the canvas, moving from abstraction into representation and suggestive expressions. Andrea also uses colour for the associations they hold. A reminder of how colour is essential to our perception of the world and recognising and identifying things. We naturally try to make abstract forms and colours into signs. Pink on blue becomes clouds on sky. Her works play this game with titles such as Through the forest in purple, I Was Possessed by the Blue, Pink Storm, Where the Birds Sing and Dirty Aubergine.
The sense of change and movement in the colour tonal shifts of Andrea’s paintings is also seen in her emotive mark making. Andrea talks of ‘dreamy moments in paint’ and a time dimension is certainly felt by these paintings. Her work is informed by colour field painters such as Helen Frankenthaler, as well as landscape expressionism such as Toss Woollaston. However, where Woollaston’s paintings are rooted in landscape specificity and place, Andrea hints at landscapes that are at once familiar and general.
In her painting Andrea is interested in finding beauty in what is given to us. Her sensitive, spontaneous and colourful paintings, they allow us to attach our own associations to them, a personal response.
A commissioned portrait which Lucy will create for you post tour. Two sizes /levels of detail are offered here, but Lucy will work with you personally to create a timeless piece that is perfect for your family collection.
PLEASE NOTE: Image is an example of Lucy’s work.
If your needs vary this is absolutely fine, and to be discussed with Lucy on the day at one of the houses.
PIL Vessel
Raku fired. Referencing modern society where every one takes a PIL of some sort. Inspired by Te Ao Maori, Wabi Sabi, and mid century design.
An orb created from randomly-woven narrow strips of harakeke (NZ flax – phormium tenax) grown in Anne’s garden, and delicately balanced on a piece of driftwood.
A commissioned portrait which Lucy will create for you post tour. Two sizes /levels of detail are offered here, but Lucy will work with you personally to create a timeless piece that is perfect for your family collection.
PLEASE NOTE: Image is an example of Lucy’s work.
If your needs vary this is absolutely fine, and to be discussed with Lucy on the day at one of the houses.
The little pink elephant teeters cheerfully upon a precipice, his situation a metaphor for the plight of elephants on a larger scale; their wellbeing and habitat being under threat from human expansion, interference and cruelty. ‘Precipitous’ is sculpted from stoneware clay, mid-fired with acrylic and wax surface treatments .
Concrete, plaster, timer and enamel.
Courtesy of Föenander Galleries.
Ramon Robertson’s work engages with elements of conformity and union between people and environment, with a specific focus on the human condition and its relationship to space. His recent sculptures evoke a sense of stillness and introspection, focusing on the human body and its relationship to structure and place. Ramon’s twin works Prop Squash humorously explore the role of passion, sub-conscious burden and multitasking plays in our lives, as well as the increasing involvement of technology in day to day tasks – which sees us both collaborating machines and becoming more machine like in behaviour.
Concrete, plaster, timer and enamel.
Courtesy of Föenander Galleries.
Ramon Robertson’s work engages with elements of conformity and union between people and environment, with a specific focus on the human condition and its relationship to space. His recent sculptures evoke a sense of stillness and introspection, focusing on the human body and its relationship to structure and place. Ramon’s twin works Prop Squash humorously explore the role of passion, sub-conscious burden and multitasking plays in our lives, as well as the increasing involvement of technology in day to day tasks – which sees us both collaborating machines and becoming more machine like in behaviour.
Big luscious oil painting, bursting with colour and expression. Thick brushstrokes laid on liberally with a palette knife.
Oil on canvas.
Framed in white tray frame.
2024 marks the fifth biennial Art House Tour, comprising seven homes in and around the Grammar Zone, as well as the Gallery situated on the School grounds, featuring the work of over 70 local artists.