Living and working in Italy for six months in 1984 immersed Jane Zusters in the NeoExpressionist works of the Italian artists of the Transavant-guardia as well as the triptych format of the Renaissance altar painting. In particular she admired the success that Mimmo Paladino had in establishing the connections between disparate elements in the same painting.
She also had the opportunity to attend the Venice Biennale, where Howard Hodgkins was representing Britain with Forty Paintings 1973-84. His work showed her how to make representational pictures of emotional situations, shaped by the rooms they happen in, and the deteriorating memories they survive in. “Howard Hodgkin paints emotional situations just as Cézanne painted apples,” she remembers. Following these leads, Zusters returned to her studio on the fourth floor of the old Greer’s clothing factory at 38 Douglas Street in Ponsonby in 1985 and began to paint postmodern pictures. Closely involved with both the peace movement and feminism, she was visited there by Christine Chabon, the first French agent to come to New Zealand before the bombing of the Rainbow Warrior. After the police found Zusters’ name and address on board the yacht Ouvea, they too, visited her studio. This triptych contains traces of that time, with the gun in the third panel (titled “Muse Madness”) a reference to the cloak-and-dagger aspect of espionage to which she had been exposed.
Time puts intense emotions in perspective; Zusters tries to take them out again. She does this with a mixture of recognisable and completely abstract shapes, because aspects of the subjects which she paints pictures about would lose their meaning if they were too specifically presented. She therefore finds herself forced into metaphor, while still littering her panels with clues for the viewer to follow. The first panel in this triptych features the abbreviation for the artist’s hometown, Christchurch, at upper left. Being both the place where she was born in 1951 and where she studied for degrees in Fine Arts and English, Christchurch remains her spiritual home, where she now lives again in the suburb of Linwood. This panel is loaded with gestural mark-making and sgraffito, a technique which originated in Italy - of scratching into the wet surface with a stick to reveal the layers beneath. Mostly black and white, this turns out to be a painting about a feeling of diffidence that faltered; an emotional situation lost not because it passed, but because it didn't happen.
This small, practical and highly readable book is written for young people making large decisions about what they want to do and how they see their futures.
Who You Are is What You Do: making choices about life after school, written by Heather McAllister, Student Centre Manager at the National Centre for Creative Arts and Industries and published by Beatnik Publishing, is strong and lively in style and addresses itself directly to its intended audience. “Thinking about life after school? Not sure what the future holds? Don’t panic! This book holds the key to your most important asset: you.”
The book offers questions to help its young readers understand themselves, information on how careers have changed for the 2010s, practical tips on choosing tertiary courses in New Zealand, and real-life examples to give inspiration. It includes blank pages to write down ideas. Heather is a philosophical counsellor specialising in life-direction guidance for teenagers and adults. While she was manager of student recruitment at The University of Auckland she spent several years counselling and advising students regarding the transition from secondary to tertiary education. Much of this book is inspired by her discussions with thousands of students around the country about their life goals and dreams. The result is an appealing and colourful volume, designed to have continuing use as a personal guidebook.
Books The University of Auckland News 7 extinguisher, the hot, lusty reds have been framed - and kept at a distance - by an icy cloud of scratchy white paint, sexlessly frotted on with brush that, like the moment, dried up. As a counterpoint to all this possibility is the neat little collar and tie of conformity, tucked in on the right.
In the central panel, “Two Selves”, the outline of the artist’s smiling face regards her doppelganger across a complex architectural interior, articulated by brushy passages of white paint.
Again in the third panel, two heads face each other, forming a pattern that can be read as either a vase or two profiles. A sense of hollowness creeps in through the stark section of descending stairs leading to an ossuary of bones at the bottom, and a skull shape looms menacingly through the window on the right. Yet despite this scary scenario, the artist has hope for fresh beginnings. A bright pink and yellow sunrise is on the horizon: seen beyond the crypt, it captures a sense of lively renewal that characterises the idea of new life.