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Although their conversational skills are lacking, Piranesi treats the dead as companions. There are thirteen skeletons, each of whom has their own Piranesi-supplied cognomen. Piranesi, so-called, and the Other are the only two living persons in the great maze. But the Other is made of stubborner stuff. Some defeatists might believe that this shows that the supposed Great and Secret Knowledge is a mirage. He has performed ritual after ritual, but all have proved futile. The Other pursues the Great and Secret Knowledge that the Other is convinced can be found within the labyrinth. Understanding the great tides that wash through the lower Halls means the difference between surviving and drowning. The maze is large enough to contain an ocean. This is only partly due to intellectual curiosity it is also a matter of survival. Nevertheless, Piranesi does his best to meticulously chart them (what they contain, what happens in them).
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The network of Halls and corridors may be endless. Piranesi doubts that “Piranesi” is his true name. Within them live two men: one nicknamed Piranesi by his companion, the other dubbed the Other by the so-called Piranesi. While inspired by the now mostly-past romance of oceanic tourism, Rapson’s ceramic boats fascinate as desirable objects that fit effortlessly onto domestic tables and shelves miniature floating villages that traversed the globe: rippling, solid, sleek and joyful.Susanna Clarke’s 2020 Piranesi is a stand-alone fantasy novel. The show is accompanied by the excellent video mentioned earlier, with a great interview with the artist (while looking at the Port of Wellington and the harbour wharves he loved visiting, his travels, reference books, clippings and the ships that inspired him), and helpful comments from exhibition entrepreneur, gallerist, artist and curator Stuart Shepherd, and Richard Benge of Arts Access Aotearoa. I admire the daring of his eccentric formats, the fluid painterliness of his mottled thin acrylic paint on curved baked rock-hard surfaces. I’m not sure they are always successful either, but it is an admirably inventive idea for a pictorial presentation. There are also a few wildly loose landscape vistas on standing crescent-shaped flaps of lumpy baked clay.
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The maritime-craft, motor vehicles, cranes and buildings I think are the most successful sculptures, having a recognisable immediacy and geometric exuberance (exuding the delights of hand-manipulated clay), with the variously sized figures the weakest, possibly because of the complexity of the human form, even when reduced to an elemental cipher. Initially he created long half-boats, relief sculptures with a flat side so that they could be placed against a wall, Then he moved to works where the whole ship was on display as a freestanding object. Some works here are uncompleted and demonstrate stages in his methodology nevertheless they still demand close viewing. There is a loosey-goosey feel to his form construction and glaze application that is infectious. I can remember being thrilled by his boats on previous occasions in Titirangi. This wonderful (quite compact) touring show was organised by the Dowse in an attempt to spread the word about his talent, but I’d argue the word was out anyway. Rapson (a Wellingtonian much admired here and overseas) was mainly known for his richly decorated ceramic ships, but here we see his passion for also making cars, animals, figures, landscape vistas, buildings, jugs, rockets and cranes, in approximately a hundred pieces spread along a wall and on four plinths. However, there is a good argument that that marketing caption is misleading, that the late Robert Rapson, instead of being ‘against the tide’ as the show’s title states, was as mainstream as any other visually skilled ‘creative’, being highly articulate both verbally and with clay (despite not being tertiary trained), not living hospitalised within an institution, successful in a sector where many ceramic artists are enthusiastically embraced-and in terms of undulating expressive wonkiness, the equal of say, stylistically similar painters Malcolm Morley and Chiam Soutine, or papier mache sculptors Red Grooms and Claes Oldenburg early in their careers. ‘Outsider Artist’ is the title of the informative video displayed with this beguiling ceramics exhibition.
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