Friday 26 October 2012

Running Hot and Cold

Running Hot and Cold

This is a season in Auckland where one day is sunny spring and the next is windy, misty winter. Ocean is all around us, and on the eastern side of the city the Tasman Sea intrudes to within one kilometre of where the Pacific Ocean creeps into the western side of the city. We can hardly expect steady weather.

These past few days have presented us with images of both extremes. Enjoy the medley......



The wild and windy Piha coast -  forty kilometres from Auckland city




Is this the Coast of New Zealand or Cornwall?




Should we sheep rug up or slip into something shear?




Relax in the sun with friends?




Or be part of a team and make hay while the sun shines?




Suffer the sharp edges of the spring sunshine?




Or make the most of the weather... Like go fly a kite?




Let the wind fill our sails?




Climb Lion Rock?




Or just put some distance between us and the city?






GIBBS FARM Kaipara Harbour

Alan Gibbs (born 1939) is a New Zealand-born businessman, entrepreneur and art collector. After a successful business career in New Zealand, which made him one of that country’s wealthiest individuals, he relocated to London in 1999. He retains strong links to New Zealand through his development of Gibbs Farm, one of the world’s leading sculpture parks. Among his many business interests, he is founder of Gibbs Amphibians,  which pioneers High Speed Amphibious technologies. Wickipedia













A sports version of Alan Gibbs amphibious vehicles.

GIBBS FARM





On Friday 26 October, Logan and Shirley organised a ticket for Prabhash, Desika and myself to join them and hundreds of art-lovers, celebrity hunters and just curious locals to sortie about Alan Gibb's rolling farm estate beside Kaipara Harbour 50 kms north of Auckland. The near 5 kilometres walking circuit brings the penitent pilgrim from one art station to the next..... perhaps penitent that they had not armed themselves with the standard Compestella staff and water gourd. 

Gibbs and his architect son-in-law Noel Lane continue to convene artists from all over the world and invite them to produce site specific art-works for what is fast becoming one of the most significant sculpture parks in the world.

Alan threw down the gauntlet at his initial meeting with the first contributor Richard Serra when he said "If you're going to do something here, I want your best effort." Alan and Noel more often than not become collaborators in the production of the pieces as the size of the works, in keeping with the scale of the landscape, often requires solving engineering problems.




Our party setting out on the art expedition. photo Prabhash Dias





Two Emus strut before Richard Serra's steel Te Tuhirangi Contour  photo Gibbs Farm website





Orchestrated water jets almost obscure Snelson's Easy K and Venet's 88.5 Arcx8 photo P.Dias





Prabhash and Desika take shelter in Marijke de Goey's The Mermaid bridge





Sol Le Witt's Pyramid (keystone NZ) keeps security busy discouraging climbers.





This ever changing wind mobile by George Rickey can delay the fascinated pilgrim





























Logan - our safari leader - confronts another Australian emigree





In a pond in the gully the Floating Island of the Immortals by Zhang Wang





On a nearby hilltop Neil Dawson's tromp l'oeil Horizons challenges us not to see in 3D





 Gibb's house on the opposite hill the destination of Daniel Buren's Green and White Fence




Unlike the restrained visitors, Gibb's daughter got to stand on one of the giant blocks of Leon van den Eijkel's Red Cloud Confrontation in Landscape at her outdoor wedding on the farm. A family friend Richard Bramson and his wife were guests at the event. 




To remind Alan of his childhood near the Rakaia River, Peter Nicholls meandered his red painted eucalypt monument Rakaia across the gully floor. On the ridge Kapoor's giant looms.





A nearby stand of living eucalypt hide a very private playground where 
Alan and his friends play war games in a mocked-up Wild West Village.





A bird attempts a fly-through of NewZealand artist Graham Bennett's Sea/Sky Kaipara





Reminiscent of birth and eternity, Anish Kapoor's Dismemberment Site 1   photo Prabhash Dias






The work has a quiet leeward side and a dramatic seaward trumpet that swallows the view and the wind of the sea. Human visitors appear like ants approaching a carnivorous plant. 





Only from one grassy vantage point can both ends of the trumpet be viewed.





This year saw the most recent and most spectacular work installed - Bernar Venet's 
88.5 ARC x 8. Each steel arc measuring 27 metres in height pay homage to the sunrise.






Desika poses with New Zealand artist Chris Booth's Kaipara Strata   photo Prabhash Dias






As close as I got to Andy Goldsworthy's  installation Arches down on the Kaipara tidal flats






New Zealand artist Jeff Thomson's Giraffe, made of corrugated iron, stands 6 metres tall





only 100 yards from the Giraffe House with its living breathing real giraffes




the Zebra corral where the two geldings are very much in love with this splendid stallion




while this young llama seems proudly aware that he's not just an ordinary sheep.




Eerily observed by the sole sentinel on the ridge, we make our way back to the car,
happy in the realisation that New Zealand's royal is a democratic prince with good taste.