Press Release

Part two of Jae Hoon Lee’s project Ocean Rain launches on 29 May 2024, when the moon is still in a high energy phase following Turu, the full moon. This second film unfolds in a digital ocean where uncanny geological forms materialise.

The dynamic interaction between ocean currents and rain simulates climactic conditions, rendered through a CGI imaginary. Ocean Rain forms the seventh weather report from Te Tuhi’s Te Moana Nui ā Kiwa weather station Huarere: Weather Eye, Weather Ear, part of the World Weather Network.

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About the Artist

A self-proclaimed cultural wanderer, Korean-born photographer Jae Hoon Lee grew up in Seoul, emigrated to the USA in 1993 to study at the San Francisco Art Institute, and then in 1998 to Auckland, New Zealand, where he graduated MFA (2001) and DocFA (2012) from the University of Auckland’s Elam School of Fine Arts. Lee’s multiple migrations and his preoccupation with expanding technological advances have continued to define and inform his practice. His work makes apparent his enduring concerns of place, movement, individuality, and the skin as point of difference. Lee’s early use of flatbed scanners to document the minutiae of his body, which he then rendered large scale in looping videos, was the genesis of his skewed visual representations.

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Also Exhibiting at Te Tuhi

About the Gallery
Te Tuhi is a nationally significant contemporary art gallery presenting exhibitions and projects by New Zealand and international artists. Te Tuhi works actively within the community of Auckland, providing a conduit for audience engagement and participation in the visual arts, underpinned by innovative exhibitions, education and associated programmes. In addition, Te Tuhi serves as a focal point for the community as an events venue and meeting place for our many users and community groups.

Te Tuhi was created in a partnership between the Fisher Gallery and the Pakuranga Community and Cultural Centre, the latter formally a Manukau City Council facility.

The Fisher Gallery had been created in the early 1980s by a dedicated and energetic group of local art lovers, who had decided that the area, only recently subdivided for residential use, needed an arts venue. The Fisher Gallery took its name from the Fisher family, who farmed the area prior to its suburbanisation and Iris Fisher, who was an original member of the Pakuranga Arts Society and the driving force behind the effort to build the new institution.

The name Te Tuhi was generously conferred on the institution by the Ngai Tai Iwi. The name refers to the legend of the ancestor Manawatere, a Maori voyager and explorer who arrived in the Hauraki Gulf prior to the arrival of the Tainui waka. Landing at the beach at Howick's Cockle Bay, he made his tuhi, or mark, on a pohutukawa tree located on the foreshore, using karamea, a red ochre. This was his sign to those who would follow, that this was the place he had chosen: Te Tuhi a Manawatere. The tree still stands today, although the tuhi has since disappeared.

Te Tuhi is administered by the Te Tuhi Contemporary Art Trust in conjunction with the Contemporary Art Foundation.
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13 Reeves Road
Pakuranga
Auckland
New Zealand
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Open daily
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Closed Public Holidays
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Auckland 13 Reeves Road, Pakuranga
Te Tuhi
13 Reeves Road, Pakuranga, Auckland, New Zealand
+64 9 577 0138
http://www.tetuhi.art

Opening hours
Open daily
9am − 5pm
Closed Public Holidays
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