Situated at 26 Princes Street, White Box is a white-walled window gallery in the front of the Fringe HQ office. The highly visible street-facing window is right next to the Octagon and attracts hundreds of people daily who are simply walking by.
In keeping with the inclusive kaupapa of Dunedin Fringe, the core aim of White Box is to support and showcase a diverse range of engaging visual arts projects in an accessible environment. This provides a chance for arts practitioners, students, writers, curators and community projects to present work free from commercial and criterion restraints. As well as offering an opportunity to a variety of local artists, White Box intends to break through preconceived ideas of what art is, demonstrating to the public the diversity of work that can fall under the label ‘visual art.’
The next exhibition features Heramaahina Eketone, a passionate teacher of mahi toi/Māori art at Te Wananga o Aotearoa. The painting, entitled Ikarangi (the galaxy), combines astrological science with Māori knowledge. Eketone explains that the work depicts the axial precession of the equinoxes, where both the north and south poles move in a circular direction. A weaving pattern represents every individual thread that comes together to create our universe, right down to the very carbon atoms made inside the stars.
Part of the exhibition line-up for White Box are the following Otepoti artists:
Much like the Fringe Festival, White Box’s key purpose is to get people excited and involved with art through its highly public location, and to support the work of a range of artists.
Heramaahina Eketone’s ‘Ikarangi’ will be on display from July 9th – 29th.
White Box @ Fringe HQ