
As with many artists who wrestle visual perception, Shaun Waugh interrogates photography’s claims to reality. Aligning old and new technologies, New Games grapples with the medium’s technical and material characteristics to arrest disjunctures in our ways of seeing. Waugh offers meditations on the aesthetic pleasures had when perceiving forms and shapes: their colours and hue, their depth, their dimensions. It’s timely in the fourth industrial revolution, with image generators startling comprehension. Drawing on machine learning and artificial intelligence, a key to Waugh’s approach to photography is the slippage between image and object and the mental and perceptual games this throws up for the viewer. Never quite sure what kind of image we are seeing, New Games wilfully sets out to point to a conceptual volatility of shapes and colours; the non-verbal lessons that would help us recognise and understand the shape of our world. In this sense, Waugh’s current practice aligns with how photography contributes to our ontological uncertainty.
From an essay by Marcus Moore, Shaun Waugh: Subject Failure (Rim Books, forthcoming 2024)
Shaun Waugh (b. 1982, Townsville, Australia) is a New Zealand-based artist who lives and works in Wellington. Waugh completed his MFA in 2012, Whiti o Rehua School of Art, Massey University Wellington where he is currently employed as Lecturer in photography. Waugh’s most recent work has focused on the material culture of photographic history. Working primarily with the complexities of colour, Waugh has sought to explore and expand the artistic and technical potentials of the photographic medium. Avoiding arbitrary definitions in favour of interdisciplinary tendencies, Waugh’s practice exploits the tension between image and object-making, pitching his chromatically-driven practice into an uncertain terrain between photography, painting and sculpture.

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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