Press Release
This new exhibition of works by gallery artist Chris Heaphy can be viewed as a lesson in the art of looking. While Heaphy provides us with representation, profiles and symbols that are instantly recognizable as they migrate across the canvas, the question of what we really see remains.

Is this indeed a summary of performances and behaviors as the paintings imply, or a series of views in which more is hidden than first look reveals? In spite of their visual complexity these paintings are misconceptions as much as they are bold perceptions: cameos on spin and perverse histories.

In View from the Top a couple of Victorian silhouettes from the age of empirical discovery and empire, stand atop the head of a Maori warrior. It is immediately historic in context, but of what history? It is clear however that it is not just the history of settlement told in profiles of huia, horsewomen and top hats, but more a history revised, of feathered heads and makomako (bellbird) unseen by the settlers who look out into the future of this new land or perhaps they are glancing back to where they originate from without seeing either way.

There is something gritty here, in the range of questions for which answers are unstable. Certainty is the illusion, for these are paintings of mystery hidden in memory, celebrating the now, looking towards the future.

Text influenced in part by Keith Stewart's writing on Chris Heaphy's new work.

Installation Views

About the Artist

Chris Heaphy’s broad appeal derives in part from the invention and development of a visually arresting personal symbology of signs. Informed by a Derridean analysis of the instability of the sign, Chris is particularly interested in the “inevitable change or slippage of meaning of the symbol.” (Artist’s statement, Frieze Art Fair, London, 2007) Drawing from an artillery of motifs both conventional and invented Chris constructs signs within signs that piece together indicators of his own identity. Fundamentally his practice engages with the notion that the relationship between sign and signifier, like that of culture and identity, is fluid, ambiguous and in a constant state of flux.

View Artist Profile Chris Heaphy contemporary artist
About the Gallery

Gow Langsford is a commercial art space committed to fostering and promoting the best contemporary art from New Zealand and abroad. Located directly opposite the Auckland Art Gallery, Gow Langsford Gallery represents over thirty established New Zealand and international artists. Gow Langsford is one of the country’s most established galleries and is widely regarded as its most influential dealer gallery. Alongside a regular and varied exhibition schedule, Gow Langsford is a market leader in works on the secondary market.

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Address
28-36 Wellesley Street East
Auckland
New Zealand
Opening Hours
Monday – Friday, 10 am–5 pm
Saturday, 10 am – 4 pm
Closed Sunday
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Auckland 28-36 Wellesley Street East
Gow Langsford Gallery
28-36 Wellesley Street East, Auckland, New Zealand

Opening hours
Monday – Friday, 10 am–5 pm
Saturday, 10 am – 4 pm
Closed Sunday
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