The Good Oil

The Good Oil

di Graeme Douglas
Stagione 4
Ep 46 Martin Basher
In this episode, I visit Martin Basher at his studio in Te Whanganui-a-Tara. This episode is part of a series I’m delivering this season for the McCahon House Parehuia Residency, celebrating their 20th Anniversary, where I’m volunteering the services of The Good Oil to highlight the wonderful and important work they do, and some of their very impressive alumni, which includes Martin. Martin has a BFA and MFA, both from Columbia University in New York. His work is held in numerous public and private collections, including Chartwell Collection at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki , The Agnes Gund Collection New York, the Majuda Collection also in New York, at the Pah Homestead Collection in Auckland. He has also been the recipient of several art prizes and residencies including the La Brea Residency in Los Angeles, the Susan Goodman Residency in Berlin, and, of course, the McCahon House Parehuia Residency in Tāmaki Makaurau. Martin is represented by Starkwhite Gallery in Auckland. There are images of the works that we talk about on The Good Oil Martin Basher Instagram Post for your reference. You’ll hear Martin the unlikely role that itinerant agricultural work took in developing his practice, his relationship to the act of painting itself, which has seen him try to hide his hand in different ways, while also admitting he needs the very act of painting in his life, the two literary figures that have helped shape the subject matter, the multifaceted role that cardboard plays and represents in the work, his ongoing environmental concerns, which are still driving a driving force for him.
Ep 45 Ed Bats
In this episode, I visit Ed Bats at his home and studio. Ed’s art qualifications are a little different from most artists that appear on the podcast, having been largely educated within the graffiti art community in Cape Town and New Zealand, a self confessed “confusing degree” and the world of furniture making and design. At this point in an introduction I usually reel off a list of public collections that an artist is in. The inclusion of Ed in an episode is instead a little different - and this requires more editoralising than usually happens here. In Ed’s case I believe the proof points of what a strong practice his is, are his high degree of technical skill in making, combined with a strong awareness, appreciation and application of art history into his works. In part this is taking the baton of sorts from Don Driver, a figure from Aotearoa Art History I’m really excited to see paid homage to. All of that comes together, with his own ideas of course, to produce really compelling contemporary art practice. Likely some of the reasons he has been added to so many private collections in the last few years. The opinion you didn’t ask for ends there, promise. Ed is represented by Peg Gallery in Te Whanganui-a-Tara There are images of the works that we talk about on The Good Oil Ed Bats Instagram Post for your reference. You’ll hear Ed talk about how his graffiti and joinery practices influence and presents itself in his studio practice, how important music is as a studio assistant, the motifs in his work that he can’t seem to escape from and his colour choices in painting, which are often secondary to the creation of substrate he builds.
Ep 44 Neke Moa
In this episode, I visit Neke Moa at her home and studio in Ōtaki on the Kāpiti Coast By the way, this episode is part of a series I’m delivering this season for the McCahon House Parehuia Residency, celebrating their 20th Anniversary, where I’m volunteering the services of The Good Oil to highlight the wonderful and important work they do, and some of their very impressive alumni, which includes Neke. Neke is Te Whare Papaīra, Ngāti Kahungunu, Kāi Tahu, Ngāti Porou, Ngāti Tūwharetoa. She has several qualifications in arts and teaching, including Diploma of Design and Art, from Te Wānanga-ō-Rau-kawa. Her work is held in numerous public and private collections, including Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, the Dowse Art Museum, and the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa. She is also the recipient of several art prizes and residencies, including the McCahon House Parehuia residency. Neke is represented by Season Gallery in Tamaki Makaurau. There are images of the works that we talk about on The Good Oil Neke Moa Instagram Post for your reference. I’ve also included a list of some of the te reo Māori that is in the episode, just in case you’re not familiar with all those words. You’ll hear Neke explain that her practice is always a collaborative one, even when she is in the studio by herself, how and why her work is sometimes respected more overseas than it is in Aotearoa, the role of activism in the practice and works, how the historical pakeha definition of art and value systems devalued Maori practices and therefore excluded the preservation of some taonga, and how toi Māori is in a new evolutionary phase.
Ep 43 Graham Fletcher
In this episode, I visit Graham Fletcher at his home and studio in Sawyers Bay, Otago. Graham has several qualifications to him name, including a Master of Fine Arts (with Hons) and a Doctor of Fine Arts, both from the Elam School of Fine Arts at the University of Auckland. He has shown in numerous solo and group shows for over 25 years, and his work is held in many private and public collections, including in the Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki, The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, The Sarjeant Galley Te Whare o Rehua and the Dowse Art Museum, and has a long list of awards and residencies to his name. He is represented by Gow Langsford Gallery in Auckland and Milford Gallery in Ōtepote Dunedin. There are images of the paintings that we talk about on The Good Oil Graham Fletcher Instagram Post for your reference. You’ll hear Graham talk about how the combination of a visit to a home in Mt Eden and the Centre Pompidou in Paris, and architecture magazines have had an unexpected and huge impact in the eventual direction of his practice, the relationship between tribal works and contemporary paintings that appear as subjects in his work, the role of the surreal, perfect world of advertisements of the 1960’s as rich reference material and the main lesson that he has taken from Matisse.
Ep 42 Ruby Wilkinson
In this episode, I visit Ruby Wilkinson at her studio in Tāmaki Makaurau. Ruby holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Massey University College of Creative Arts, Te Whanganui-a-Tara, and is currently in the Master of Fine Arts program at Victoria College of Arts, Melbourne University. Her work is held in numerous public and private collections in Aotearoa, including in the Arts House Trust Collection, and she won the supreme winner of the New Zealand Painting and Printmaking Award in 2021, and has exhibited in over a dozen solo and group shows since 2020. She is represented by Jhana Millers Gallery in Wellington. There are images of the paintings that we talk about on The Good Oil Ruby Wilkinson Instagram Post for your reference. You’ll hear Ruby speak about the interesting role figuration has in her process of abstract painting, why she thinks the nature of a her intuitive painting practice is one that so readily translates to viewers, how her paintings can include a lot of private elements that viewers will never see, how she considers a single painting that we see, a layer of multiple paintings that she has created, and, as you’ll hear right throughout the episode, a theme of a young painter that is carefully guiding her evolution with a series of restrictions and deliberate lessons.
Ep 41 Grace Wright
In this episode, I visit Grace Wright at her studio in Tāmaki Makaurau. Grace holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts and a Master of Fine Arts (with First Class Honours) from the Elam School of Fine Arts at the University of Auckland. She has several awards and residencies to her name, including being the recipient of the 2026 Toi Tauranga Art Gallery Patrons Project and the 2017 Parlour Projects Residency in Hastings. Her work is held in numerous private collections in Aotearoa and internationally, and has exhibited in over 20 solo or group shows. She is represented by Gow Langsford Gallery in Auckland and Ames Yavuz Gallery in Sydney, Singapore and London. There are images of the paintings that we talk about on The Good Oil Grace Wright Instagram Post for your reference. You’ll hear Grace speak about an experiment a few years into her practice which created an historical atmosphere that delivered a significant shift in the paintings, the constant wrestle she has with the paradox that exists in her practice, how reading broadly is an important experiential parallel to her painting, that she is drawing on a unique, unbiased mix including Baroque religious representation, mystics like Hilma af Klint and concepts held by quantum physics as a kind of collective awe of imperfect knowledge to explore painting.
Ep 40 John Ward Knox
In this episode, I visit John Ward Knox at his home, studio and garden in Karitane. John holds a Master of Fine Arts from the Elam School of Fine Arts at the University of Auckland. He has work held in numerous public and private collections, including the Chartwell collection, the Pah Homestead collection and the Govett-Brewster Gallery collection, he has exhibited in over 35 solo or group shows, and has been the recipient of several art awards and residencies, including being the The Francis Hodgkins Fellowship recipient in 2015. He is represented by Robert Heald Gallery in Te Whanganui-a-Tara, Ivan Anthony in Auckland and Darren Knight Gallery in Sydney / Gadigal land. There are images of the paintings that we talk about on The Good Oil John Ward Knox Instagram Post for your reference. You’ll hear John speak about the pace and footprint he wants for himself and the practice, the active role of writing as a parallel to works and exhibitions, a belief that his role as an artist is to create space for someone to exist, but also how viewers can implicate themselves in the duration, or destruction, of the objects that he creates, his relationship to rural, small town and big city Aotearoa, and how he managed to sustain eight years of painting from a single $38 tube of paint.
Stagione 3
Ep 39 Simon Kaan
In this episode, I sit down with Ōtepoti based artist Simon Kaan at Sanderson gallery in Tāmaki Makaurau. Simon is of Ngāi Tahu, Chinese and Pākeha descent. He has a Diploma of Fine Arts, with Honours, from Otago Polytechnic, and has works held in numerous public and private collections including The University of Waikato collection, at The Arts House Trust and the Christchurch Art Gallery Te Puna o Waiwhetu collection. He has also been the recipient of several art awards and residencies. He is represented by Sanderson Gallery in Auckland, Gallery Thirty Three in Wanaka and De Nova gallery in Ōtepoti. There are images of the paintings that we talk about on The Good Oil Simon Kaan Instagram Post for your reference. In the episode you’ll hear Simon speak about the influences of his Chinese, Māori and European whakapapa on his life and practice, how the absence of a Western art aesthetic growing up made art school more challenging, but also allowed him to create his uniquely own work, the significant influence of Marilyn Webb, his encounters with Ralph Hotere and a kind of parallel of Ralph's painting that Simon sees in his own work, and his ongoing collaboration with ceramicist and uku maker, Wi Taepa
Ep 38 Sarah Smuts-Kennedy
In this episode, I visit Sarah Smuts-Kennedy at her home and studio at Maunga Kereru, in Mahurangi West, north of Auckland. Sarah has a Master of Fine Arts, with first class honours, from the Elam School of Fine Arts at the University of Auckland. She is a multidisciplinary artist who has worked across photography, sculpture and painting, exhibiting in Australia and Aotearoa for more than 20 years. She has been the recipient of several art prizes and residencies, including the McCahon Residency Parehuia. Her work is held in numerous public and private collections including the Art Gallery of South Australia and the Te Haerenga Collection. She is represented by Laree Payne Gallery in Kirikiriroa. There are images of the paintings that we talk about on The Good Oil Sarah Smuts Kennedy Instagram Post for your reference. In the episode you’ll hear Sarah speak about how she identified the need to move her practice from pictorialising problems to regenerating solutions, how her practice is guided by her spiritual team, that her art practice, her garden, her work in regenerative horticulture and her own healing are all closely linked, and that her time at the McCahon Residency allowed her to find a way into mark making and eventually painting that was nothing short of a revelation.
Ep 37 Richard Killeen
Kia ora, welcome to episode 37 of The Good Oil, conversations with Aotearoa painters. In this episode, I visit Richard Killeen at his home and studio in Tāmaki Makaurau. Richard is over five decades into one of the most celebrated practices in New Zealand. He has work held in numerous public and private collections, including The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, The Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, the Christchurch Art Gallery Te Puna O Waiwhetū and the Fletcher Collection. He is represented by McLeavey Gallery in Te Whanganui a Tara and Ivan Anthony in Auckland. There are images of the paintings that we talk about on The Good Oil Richard Killeen Instagram Post for your reference. In the episode you’ll hear Richard speak about the lessons that he took from the writing of James Joyce to apply to painting, how the interesting part of art is what you don’t see, his love for museums, how he has applied and always evolved the use of technology in his practice and why getting feedback from Philip Clairmont that his work was a disgrace to humanity was great to hear.
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