Press Release
Starkwhite is pleased to present Heather Straka's project The Asian from October 7 to November 9.

Originally staged at the Dunedin Public Art Gallery in 2010 and curated by Aaron Kreisler, The Asian is Straka's first major project with Starkwhite. As Kreisler wrote at the time, ”The Asian is comprised of an original painting by Straka and 59 copies produced by 59 Chinese artisans working from the Dafen Oil Painting Village in the Longgang District of Shenzhen. Straka is an artist who has built a reputation over the last decade for her ability to seamlessly fuse appropriated 'sitters' from historical paintings, with contemporary imagery and concerns relating to sexual identity and cultural politics.

The Asian represented a significant shift in the way that Straka operates as an artist. In this instance she has moved from the art studio, to a situation where she has managed the production of multiple hand-made copies of her own work within a foreign environment. As part of the process, Straka spent a sustained period on the ground in China, discussing the ideas and implications of her project with the copy artists and company representatives from the Dafen Village, then inviting the artists to sign their versions of her 'Asian Girl' painting.

The twist in this project is that Straka has sent her contemporary version of an early 20th century Shanghai poster girl, to be copied at its cultural source. The Asian brings into question the relationship between the original and replica because, as the commissioning artist, Straka has not only duplicated aspects of the Shanghai poster girl tradition, she has also intentionally concealed her hand by displaying all the paintings together, in a salon-style hang, without distinguishing her original.

As an image of desire, the Shanghai poster girl became an important marketing device for selling consumer goods to the growing urban Chinese middle classes between the early 1920s and mid 1930s. The glamorous sexy modern Asian woman became ubiquitous in this period, appearing in newspapers, magazines, billboard campaigns, popular fiction and films. She became the emblem for a new modernised China and was increasingly promoted as an attainable fantasy for a new generation of middle to upper class emancipated women.

In this updated version of the Shanghai poster girl, Straka has added a tiki, deliberately returning the painting to a New Zealand cultural context. The addition of this Maori motif in this series of paintings is significant because the tiki, as an object distinct from Chinese culture, acts as the 'indefinite article' for the copy artists. The use of the tiki inThe Asianalso invites the audience to consider the mass production and trade in 'authentic' cultural goods and experiences, both historically and within contemporary times.

The Asian is accompanied by a catalogue of the same name, published by the Dunedin Public Art Gallery.
About the Artist

Heather Straka (b. 1972) has a Bachelor of Fine Arts in sculpture from Elam School of Fine Arts and a Master of Fine Arts from University of Canterbury School of Fine Arts. Straka has been granted a number of awards and held several residencies, including the Frances Hodgkins Fellowship at the University of Otago. The flawless nature of her early sculptural work was to be a precursor to the immaculate technique and precision that has come to characterise her paintings. Her practice regularly explores the nature of authenticity and issues around representation. Earlier works saw her reimagine nineteenth-century portraits by Sydney Parkinson and Gottfried Lindauer. Straka’s project The Asian saw the mass duplication by Chinese artisans of Straka’s interpretation of a portrait based on those Shanghai Girls seen in early 20th century calendar painting. Straka’s series Defenders of New Zealand explores early colonial landscape painting, while other figurative works see her turn attention to more contemporary subject matter, reflecting Aotearoa’s increasingly multicultural identity.

View Artist Profile Heather Straka contemporary artist
About the Gallery

Starkwhite is a contemporary art gallery in Auckland, New Zealand, specialising in the presentation of interdisciplinary visual art exhibitions with an international focus. Starkwhite is committed to a strong art fair programme engaging with the best of contemporary art practice.

In 2022 Starkwhite partnered with 1301PE (Los Angeles) to open 1301SW in Melbourne, Australia. 1301SW opened its second space in Sydney in October 2024. www.1301SW.com.

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Starkwhite
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Tue - Fri, 10pm - 5pm
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