JOY brings together seven artists and makers from varying stages of their practice in a bountiful and generous-spirited celebration of objects. Set against a backdrop of contemporary furniture, intended to invoke a homelike environment, the works display a myriad of shapes and forms.
Cargo Bike Art Space brings artists and art to the streets, cycle ways and public spaces in Ōtepoti Dunedin.
Cargo Bike Art Space presents art-on-the-move around Ōtepoti Dunedin. Five artists over ten days of the festival will utilise the cargo space of the bike to create projects that can be easily relocated to different venues, parks and cycleways. The space itself may be small but with renowned local artists each project promises inovative works, diverse perspectives on public space, inclusivity, politics, and the environment. Bring your bike, ride with us, or meet up at specific locations over the festival.
Elise Johnston Get The Ball Rolling:
Johnston’s ‘Get the Ball Rolling’ will see the bike cargo hold transformed into an oversized labyrinth puzzle game. Stony ceramic balls will rampage a course through maze walls constructed from clay sprigs and studio odds and ends. As the bike is manoeuvred the cargo bucket will become a commotion of clinking ballistics and crumbling walls. See Johnston’s rolling ball maze: Fri 26th at 4-4.30pm Starting at Marlow Park, moving to St Clair Park, then Bathgate Park, finishing at Green Island Park 5.30-6pm. Sat 27th 4pm Green Island Park, moving to Bathgate park, then St Clair Park, ending at Marlow Park 5.30-6pm.
A group show featuring Tatyanna Meharry, Emma Turner and Elise Johnston. Opens at Form Gallery, Christchurch on Feb 8th – 28th 2020.
The Unctuous and the Edible
“Works that are inspired by that moment of time when you find yourself transfixed by and artwork that is so exquisitely delectable your initial reflex is to lick it. Three Different narratives to explore the balance between the fluidity of the ceramic medium which can happen spontaneously during the making process, and the final fixed state where this can be captured in mid flow.”
The Otago Art Society and the Ceramics Association of New Zealand southern region are bringing their members’ works together under one roof in a joint exhibition. Rebecca Fox talks to painter Anton Lambaart and potter and ceramic artist Elise Johnston about their work.
Dunedin potter and ceramic artist Elise Johnston also enjoys the collegiality of belonging to an organisation of fellow artists.
She joined the local potters group and found the monthly meetings are a great place to learn new skills and talk to experienced potters.
Current exhibition showcased the work of nine designers and artists who were invited to creatively respond to specific garments from the Museum’s costume and textile collection.
Mother and daughter team Karen Taylor O’Neill and Elise Johnston of Three Cups of Tea hail from the land of vowels and royal family tea towels. What is it with the English, whether in trenches or in battles at sea, that everything stops for tea? “My nana reckons it takes her 3 cups of tea to get going in the morning” says Elise. Better than a fifth of vodka, I suppose, but there’s more to the company moniker than recommended doses. The Balti people of Pakistan have a proverb that goes something like: the first cup of tea you drink as an honoured guest, the second as a good friend, the third cup of tea you drink as family. It’s this idea of breaching the divide and coming together that is behind the tea sets, tea pots, vases and tableware smiling out at you from the window of Guild like pretty girls in party dresses.
The Blue Oyster is pleased to present Elise O’Neill and Aroha Novak | Expensive Rubbish and Elspeth Fougere | Here, There and Everywhere (We are a Community of Cells). Using handmade and recycling methods O’Neill, Novak and Fougere are part of an international resurgence of a craft and do-it-yourself ethos, which has grown in response to current economic and environmental conditions. The exhibitions will open on Tuesday 1 December at 5:30pm and run until 24 December 2009
Nose to Tail 2008 – Elise O’Neill Hit the Wall at The Dowse Art Museum 2.2.09 – 29.12.09
Hit the Wall is a unique project designed to showcase the work of graphic designers from New Zealand and around the world on the walls of TheNewDowse. Elise O’Neill is the winner of the Common Ground Hit the Wall competition—with her work ‘Nose to Tail’.