Press Release
Deliberately dislocating and enigmatic, Boyd Webb’s photographs question the nature of reality. Earlier work, with their choreographed studio scenes, consisting of actors and props, became increasingly fantastic – opened a portal to a surreal version of the real world, with ecological subtexts. His staged tableaux - balloons stuffed with nails, lengths of carpet twisted to form seas, an old futon folded and photographed to resemble flesh – fabricated reality by exploiting the capacity of photography for duplicity.

In later work Webb has become less theatrical, less elaborate in his techniques and devices. Colour photography has remained his preferred medium for its ability to give his images plausibility, retaining the inherent honesty and authenticity of the photographic medium, while revealing the contrivances underlying their creation.

Paradoxically, Webb’s images in From the Cusp are straight or un-manipulated. Resplendent, colourful, with a heightened palette, the photography mimics the reality of the digital world. Familiar found material made seductive and alluring - glittering metallic fish lures, a fabricated knot of eels, painted porcelain dolls heads and bodies, a faux capon - have lost their usual properties and function. With his characteristic mordant humour, Webb has imbued the artificial character of these images, without the substance or qualities of the original, a monumentality and presence, which carry implicit associations of sexuality, impotence and decay. The faux French capon, a rooster castrated before it reaches sexual maturity, has no beak, in one image the fish lure no tail, in another the hook is severed from the mouth. The dolls mirror or simulate the potency of sacred artifacts or fetish voodoo figures from other cultures.

The artist exploits and provides an unsettling tension where artifice and the rudimentary wrestle with illusion and reality. He mines a very human desire for simulacra - replicas or copies that depict things that either have no reality to begin with, or that no longer have an original - resemblance is merely a surface effect, an illusion. Webb’s work is a critique of our inability to recognize the real, the true and the false, an original or a reproduction in what Jean Paul Sartre would have called the de-realisation of the world of everyday reality. These images speak eloquently of man’s uneasy relationship with himself and the natural world.

Born in New Zealand, Boyd Webb studied art at Canterbury University before winning a scholarship to study at the Royal College of Art, London. He has exhibited widely internationally, with solo shows in amongst other public galleries, Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, Stedelijk van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and Auckland Art Gallery. He was shortlisted for the Turner Prize in 1988. Webb’s work is held in major public and private collections in the UK, Europe, United States, Australia and New Zealand. The artist has lived and worked in England since 1972.

Selected Works

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Boyd Webb Conversation Boyd Webb I have tried to imbue the artificial character of these images with a monumentality and presence with implicit associations of sexuality, impotence and decay. Read the story
About the Artist

Boyd Webb is a renowned New Zealand and British artist/photographer, holding solo exhibitions at the Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, 1978 and 1987, and the Auckland Art Gallery in 1998.

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About the Gallery

Two Rooms is a contemporary art exhibition venue located in a converted warehouse in Central Auckland, New Zealand. Opened in August 2006, Two Rooms presents a program of residencies and projects by leading International and New Zealand contemporary artists. The building houses two exhibition spaces, the Project Room and the Long Room.

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16 Putiki Street
Newton
Auckland
New Zealand
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Tue - Fri, 11am - 6pm
Sat, 11am - 3pm
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Auckland 16 Putiki Street, Newton
Two Rooms
16 Putiki Street, Newton, Auckland, New Zealand
+64 9 360 5900
http://www.tworooms.co.nz

Opening hours
Tue - Fri, 11am - 6pm
Sat, 11am - 3pm
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