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why do you seek after it by Jo Dalgety

04/02/23  to 21/02/23
Tues - Sat, 10am - 3pm
Jo Dalgety working with water colour, charcoal, mono printing and collage has begun an exploratory creative journey looking back into a land that once was.

Closes

Apr 22, 2023

Posted on

Jan 22, 2023

Event type:

Art , Exhibition , Preview ,

Price:

free

Venue:

Railway St Gallery

Region:

Auckland ,

Written by

Railway Street Studios
Jan 22, 2023

‘A chance remark led to my delving into the history of the Hauraki Plains, going back much further than my great Grandfathers arrival, knocking my ‘prosperous land for dairy farming’ narrative off its pedestal.’

Originally the Hauraki Plains were built up from the sediment deposited by the Piako and Waihou rivers which flow north to reach the sea at the Firth of Thames, and earlier onto the ancestral Waikato River.

In 1910 , 6,600 hectares of the Hauraki Plains was made available for settlement in a land ballot at Ngatea, by 1930 around 17,400 hectares had been opened up for farming.

It was at this point that these plains, these vast areas of wetland and the kahikatea forests began their conversion from ‘virgin state’ into the ‘prosperous’ land for dairy farming that we know to be the Hauraki Plains today.

Jo Dalgety working with water colour, charcoal, mono printing and collage has begun an exploratory creative journey looking back into a land that once was. Her childhood home seen in challenging a new light.

A land just freshly introduced to her – lush and thriving. Wetlands, alluvial plains, peat heavy and partly swampy.

A land full of mangroves, raupo, harakeke and a dense forest of Kahikatea. A home for wild ducks and eels. The rich flora and fauna of the plains providing staples for the Maori people who lived in the region.

This new body of work has a beautiful intensity to it – like the alluvial plains, layers of texture, medium and colour invite you into this new narrative. The work asks you to reach out to it, to touch it, feel it, and remember it.

‘I am just at the start of this project, and this is the result of my reading and discovery thus far’.

We invite you to be part of her journey.

Please join us for the opening on Sat 4th February 3-5pm

The exhibition will be up until 21st February.

 

why do you seek after it by Jo Dalgety