Thursday, October 13, 2016

INLAND at Whitespace

INLAND is a joint exhibition with the sculptor Bing Dawe that is showing at Whitespace Gallery until Sunday the 6th of November 2016. My recent shows have had been about historical figures. This one is simply a series of landscapes. You can check out the Bing Dawe's marvellous sculptural works and find out more by clicking on this link to the Gallery

When Tom and Elizabeth took the farm. 93 x 83 cms

The Sheet. 1009 x 77 cms

Driving up the Paraparas 1. 120 x 30

Driving up the Paraparas 2. 60 x 25

Driving up the Paraparas 3. 60 x 15

The Te Humenga Dunes 1. 180 x 20

The Te Humenga Dunes 11. 180 x 20

The Red Bulldozer. 140 x 20

Seven Suitcases on the South Coast. 180 x 30

Hunterville Farm Track. 180 x 30


Here is TJ McNamara's review of the show from the New Zealand Herald

The special effects of modern acrylic rather than oil paint are used by Bob Kerr in his show, Inland. Although all the paintings generally are of New Zealand landscapes, there are always traces of human activity and a sense of concern for damage done to the land.
In a range of steep bare hills of farmland, a raw road has been cut through the slopes. It is spectacular but it will produce erosion and the farmer's bulldozer that provokes this loss of pasture sits bright red on the road like Smaug the dragon taking the air.
In The Paraparas, an even longer road loops fascinatingly across the hills but on one of them erosion has already begun. Other damage done in the effort to establish pasture is exemplified by bare dead logs lying like lines of perspective pointing to the future in Te Humenga Dunes. The dryness of the logs, the bareness of the hills the thinness of vegetation is conveyed by thin paint that is often scraped through to underpaint to create forms.
The flexibility of effect of the paint is used well for human interventions, too. Seven symbolic suitcases sit as strange invasive objects on a road in one painting. In another, the outstanding work in the show, it is used to separate two figures from the natural environment.
They are Tom and Elizabeth from the famous poem by Denis Glover where death and madness overtake the couple striving against the odds to establish a farm during the Great Depression. Among burnt logs, they stand facing an immense tree trunk greater than any kauri. Its bark surface is excellently conveyed. It emphasises its role as symbolic obstacle rather than a simple illustration of the poem.
It completes a small but very unusual show.

Thursday, June 16, 2016

Changing Times shortlisted for the Children's Book Awards

It has been very gratifying to have Changing Times shortlisted in the non-fiction and in the  illustration catergories of the Children's Book Awards. There are some very strong contenders this year. I was particularly pleased to see Phoebe Morris there with her excellent illustrations for First To The Top written by David Hill. A talented young illustrator with a great future ahead of her I reckon. I'm also looking forward to reading David's Enemy Camp and If you haven't yet read Being Magdalene by Fleur Beale rush of to the Children's Bookshop and buy it straight away and while you're there buy the other two books in the series as well.