BartlettCataloguewebversion

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Preview: Tuesday 7th August 5.30 - 7.30pm 8th - 25th August 2012 Brass Rough, 2012, brass Metalier coating and mixed media on canvas, 101 x 101 cm. WARWICK HENDERSON GALLERY 32 Bath St, Parnell, Ak, NZ | T/F. +64 9 309 7513 W. www.warwickhenderson.co.nz | E. [email protected] ALEXANDER BARTLEET METAL

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Preview: Tuesday 7th August 5.30 - 7.30pm

8th - 25th August 2012

Brass Rough, 2012, brass Metalier coating and mixed media on canvas, 101 x 101 cm.

WARWICK HENDERSON GALLERY32 Bath St, Parnell, Ak, NZ | T/F. +64 9 309 7513W. www.warwickhenderson.co.nz | E. [email protected]

ALEXANDER BARTLEET METAL

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ALEXANDER BARTLEET METAL

Copper 3, 2012, copper Metalier coating and mixed media on board, 30 x 30cm

Aluminium Rough 2, 2012, aluminium Metalier coating and mixed media on board, 30 x 30cm

Brass 2, 2012, brass Metalier coating and mixed media on board, 30 x 30cm

Like many collectors Alexander Bartleet accumulates the objects and fragments of his daily life which in turn become symbolic and emblematic assisting in making sense of the world and its history of the wider world. His creations are records of his life but they are also time capsules, encapsulations of time and place.

Bartleet’s assemblages or installations take the form of painted constructions or constructed paintings which can appear confusing, intriguing and mysterious as well as being remarkably simple and ordinary. They are both obviously realist as well as being utterly abstract. He collects hundreds of small objects, the discards of a consumer society – cell phones, keys, bits of chain and rope, electronic components, tape cassettes, strips of wood and metal – and, as something of an artists in-joke, a paint brush. These objects are then randomly, or quite possibly carefully, assembled and then sealed with layers of paint, preserving the mundane objects in a collage which owes much to the cubist notion of portraying objects of the everyday.

But these simple assemblages begin to take on greater complexity the more the viewer attempts to understand or ascribe meaning to the works. At a very basic level these are really just traditional still life paintings where the artist has selected a group of objects which the viewer is asked to consider. Traditional still life works often had religious and allegorical symbolism relating to the objects depicted and more contemporary still life’s can take on personal, social and political readings. The various groups of objects could also be seen as the artist inventing a narrative or a puzzle where there are clues or links between the objects. They become a witty and convoluted version of a da Vinci code.

In these various interpretations of the work we are impelled by the natural curiosity of bringing order and meaning to what may appear to be random or arbitrary occurrences. We become Sherlock Holmes-like, in our quest for the truth. It only takes a small toy figure as in “Aluminium Rough 2” to sense a strange super heroes tale or the single letter “H” in “Brass 2” to begin scanning all the objects to see if this puzzle is solvable, or whether it is an enigmatic conundrum of the artists own invention. The way in which these assemblages appear to be sections of some larger unit from which it has been excised is reminiscent of the environmental work of the Boyle Family who reconstructed actual sections of the Earth chosen at random. The large work “Gisborne Triptych” in the Auckland Art Gallery collection where they constructed a section of a Gisborne street is a larger scale version of Bartleet’s creations. Like the Boyle Family he records a section of his actual world, a slice of reality which is arbitrary and flawed.

In this new exhibition “Metal” there is greater sophistication with an emphasis on the way in which the objects have been made into metal objects as though they have been cast in gold, silver or bronze and that they are precious objects in their own right as well as being a collection of objects. Ultimately, like most artists Bartleet is involved with transformation, of turning raw material and simple ideas into something else - in his case turning the detritus of life into expressive, virtuoso, creations of significance.

Text by John Daly-Peoples, 2012