paul hartigan 'the infinities' catalogue

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the Infinities Paul Hartigan 12th June - 12th July 2014 251 Parnell Road; Habitat Courtyard; ph 09 3774832; www.ppg.net.nz

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Contemporary artist Paul Hartigan is recognized for his arresting large-scale public neon commissions. His dramatic orange monochrome Colony at the Faculty of Engineering on Symonds St won Best Public Sculpture Metro Awards in 2006. He attended Elam School of fine Art 1971-73 with teachers Colin McCahon, Robert Ellis and Garth Tapper. His current work continues to push boundaries and challenge conceptions of both society and self in a visually arresting and timeless fashion. Paul Hartigan remains one of New Zealand’s most intriguing and inspirational artists. Paul Hartigan is represented in public and private collections throughout New Zealand including Te Papa Tongarewa, The Hocken and National Library, Auckland Art Gallery, Govett-Brewster+Sarjeant Art Gallery, The Gallery of Modern Art in Queensland, Australia.

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Page 1: Paul Hartigan 'the Infinities' catalogue

the InfinitiesPaul Hartigan

12th June - 12th July 2014

251 Parnell Road; Habitat Courtyard; ph 09 3774832; www.ppg.net.nz

Page 2: Paul Hartigan 'the Infinities' catalogue

Paul Hartigan (b. 1953)

The Infinities is a perfect combination of the digital and the spiritual.

Paul Hartigan’s infinity paintings of almost twenty years ago were computer files, printed on vinyl and made soft by the crudity of the then nascent billboard inkjet technology. This printing process was so imprecise that each infinity work, even though it was the output of a digital image, became an analogue original.

Alongside these works on vinyl, Hartigan reprises some of the original Infinities, now cloaked in the digital exactness of 2014. The colours, once muted and muddied by inefficient inkjet heads are now bold and defined. The magic that the Infinities of old played on the eye is now less tricky, due to the clarity of the image. In a spooky trip back to the future, these new Infinities are more Pop than painterly.

The Infinities constitutes an extensive meditation on form and concept. Infinity is a number that has no end; it is bigger than all of us; it has no bounds. Sometimes the canvas struggles to contain it; at other times it is part of a larger whole. Hartigan manipulates this symbol that stands for eternity: he camouflages it, blurs its edges, and stretches it, locating it in the kaleidoscope, the petri dish and the gene pool – the canvas is not only in and of the world, but also in and of the viewer.

Hartigan revels in the classic beauty of the form of the infinity symbol: all curves, like the back and buttocks of a perfect human form, and that elegant cross in the middle. Follow it with your eyes and it does go forever – it has no beginning and no end, yet it never loses sight of itself. It is the void, but one which Hartigan makes perceptible. Grasping eternity may seem impossible, but The Infinities offers that potential.

Text by Don Abbott 2014

Page 3: Paul Hartigan 'the Infinities' catalogue

Dust Pigment on paper

800 x 800 mm, edition of 15, 2014

Page 4: Paul Hartigan 'the Infinities' catalogue

Spirit Pigment on paper

800 x 800 mm, edition of 15, 2014

Page 5: Paul Hartigan 'the Infinities' catalogue

ScapePigment on paper

800 x 800 mm, edition of 15, 2014

Page 6: Paul Hartigan 'the Infinities' catalogue

SpyPigment on paper

800 x 800 mm, edition of 15, 2014

Page 7: Paul Hartigan 'the Infinities' catalogue

MutaPigment on vinyl

1820 x 1800 mm, 1999

Page 8: Paul Hartigan 'the Infinities' catalogue

ChromoPigment on vinyl

920 x 900 mm, 1999

Page 9: Paul Hartigan 'the Infinities' catalogue

VirusPigment on vinyl

1220 x 1200 mm, 1999

Page 10: Paul Hartigan 'the Infinities' catalogue

TagPigment on paper

600 x 600 mm, multiple, 2014

Page 11: Paul Hartigan 'the Infinities' catalogue

MimicPigment on vinyl

1220 x 1200 mm, 1998

Page 12: Paul Hartigan 'the Infinities' catalogue

SonicPigment on vinyl

1220 x 1200 mm, 1998

Page 13: Paul Hartigan 'the Infinities' catalogue

SpiritPigment on vinyl

2020 x 2000 mm, 1998

Page 14: Paul Hartigan 'the Infinities' catalogue

MatrixPigment on vinyl

1120 x 2200 mm, 1999

Page 15: Paul Hartigan 'the Infinities' catalogue

SpectraPigment on vinyl

1210 x 1490 mm, 1999

Page 16: Paul Hartigan 'the Infinities' catalogue

1. Dust Pigment on paper 800 x 800 mm, edition of 15, 2014 $2,800

2. Spirit Pigment on paper 800 x 800 mm, edition of 15, 2014 $2,800

3. Scape Pigment on paper 800 x 800 mm, edition of 15, 2014 $2,800

4. Spy Pigment on paper 800 x 800 mm, edition of 15, 2014 $2,800

5. Muta Pigment on vinyl 1820 x 1800 mm, 1999 $16,800

6. Chromo Pigment on vinyl 920 x 900 mm, 1999 $6,800

7. Virus Pigment on vinyl 1200 x 1200 mm, 1999 $8,800

8. Tag Pigment on paper 600 x 600 mm, multiple, 2014 $1,480

9. Mimic Pigment on vinyl 1220 x 1200 mm, 1998 $8,800

10. Sonic Pigment on vinyl 1220 x 1200 mm, 1998 $8,800

11. Spirit Pigment on vinyl 2020 x 2000 mm, 1998 $18,800

12. Matrix Pigment on vinyl 1120 x 2200 mm ,1999 $14,800

13. Spectra Pigment on vinyl 1210 x 1490 mm, 1999 $9,800

Paul Hartigan remains one of New Zealand’s most intriguing and inspirational artists. He attended Elam School of fine Art 1971-73 with painting teachers Colin McCahon, Robert Ellis and Garth Tapper and sculptors Adrian Hall, Greer Twiss and Jim Allen. He is represented in public and private collections throughout New Zealand including Te Papa Tongarewa, The Hocken and National Library, Auckland Art Gallery, Govett-Brewster and Sarjeant Art Gallery; The Queensland Gallery of Modern Art, Australia.

251 Parnell Road; Habitat Courtyard; ph 09 3774832; www.ppg.net.nz