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Michael Lett (gallery)

Michael Lett is a gallery dealing in contemporary art that operates in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland, New Zealand. The gallery was established by Michael Lett in 2003 and since 2015 he has been joined by co-director and part owner Andrew Thomas.

Michael Lett (gallery)
Michael Lett at the Great North Road site, 2013
Established2003
Location312 Karangahape Road
TypeContemporary art dealer gallery
Websitehttps://michaellett.com

History edit

Michael Lett opened his eponymous gallery in a ground floor space on the corner of Karangahape Road and Edinburgh Street, Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland in 2003. Lett had previously worked for art dealers Anna Bibby and Sue Crockford and was with the Gow Langsford Gallery when he decided to open his own business.[1] The gallery was initially founded in partnership with the artist Michael Parekōwhai and opened with Dive an exhibition by Steve Carr.[2] The second exhibition Views of Space with the Australian artist Hany Armanious gave some indication of the breadth of artists Lett intended to pursue.[3] From 2008 to 2011 Lett was assisted by Sarah Hopkinson who has described Michael Lett as a place to see, ‘…serious exhibitions by serious artists.’[1] Hopkinson, after leaving Michael Lett would go on to develop her own gallery presence in Auckland, at Costal Signs.[4] Lett has attracted other assistants who have gone on to make their own mark in the visual arts including Ryan Moore now director of his own gallery Fine Arts Sydney and Becky Hemus editor of Art News[5] and The Art Paper.[6]

 
Mike Hewson installation 'Fountains' at East Street, 2024

Michael Lett remained on Karangahape Road until 2011 when it moved to a large space on the Great North Road.[7] Art critic John Hurrell described the first exhibition trans-cryption by the artist collective et al. as, ‘an exciting exhibition to explore….’ and ‘a useful way of getting acquainted with Lett’s new space’.[8] Andrew Thomas, who had previously worked with Hamish McKay in Wellington and White Cube in London, joined the gallery and later becomes partner and co-owner.[9] The increased space allowed the gallery to offer artists the opportunity to show large scale works and installations not possible in the more restricted Karangahape Road site for example the combined exhibition of Michael Parekōwhai and et al. in collaboration with Anya Henis and Samuel Holloway in 2013[10] and Michael Stevenson’s installation Proof of the Devil in 2013.[11] The gallery returned to Karangahape Road in 2014 siting itself on the bottom floor of an old bank building on the corner of East Street.[12] In 2022 the gallery took over a hall next door to use as a project space.[13] The Methodist Mission Hall had been opened in 1909 and designed by Alexander Wiseman.[14] Early projects have included a recreation of Jim Allen’s performance Poetry for Chainsaws,[15] Michael Stevenson’s installation Waiting for the Other Shoe to Drop, Seating Proposal for a Grant Maker,[16] and Kate Newby's installation Had Us Running With You.[17]

Artists edit

 
Jim Allen performance piece at the Karangahape Road gallery, 2014

The current list of artists (2024) represented by Michael Lett are:

Anouska Akel et al. Séraphine Pick
Jim Allen Richard Frater Ian Scott
Hany Armanious Gavin Hipkins Sriwhana Spong
Dan Arps Zac Langdon-Pole Michael Stevenson
Steve Carr Paul Lee Peter Stichbury
Fiona Clark Judy Millar Imogen Taylor
Stella Corkery Kate Newby Kalisolate ‘Uhila
Martin Creed Michael Parekōwhai Cerith Wyn Evans
Julian Dashper Campbell Patterson
Simon Denny Oliver Perkins

Exhibitions edit

From the last show of its first year of operation, Michael Parekōwhai’s Kapa Haka, five life-sized figures posing as security guards in the gallery’s street facing window,[18] to  et al.’s 2023 installation I am the Direct Source of Truth that introduced itself with a waste paper bin full of bulldog clips[19] Michael Lett has also demonstrated a strong interest in representing a wide range of work by important contemporary artists. The gallery has also shown an interest in promoting recent art history and first showed work by Jim Allen the influential teacher and artist within three years of opening.[20] Since that time Lett has regularly featured Allen who was 83 when he first performed at the gallery. The work exhibited was a re-creation by Allen of his performance piece Poetry for Chainsaws that was first shown in 1976 at the Experimental Art Foundation in Adelaide, Australia. Since then Allen performed and exhibited a mix of recreated and new works until his death in 2023.[21] More recently the work of Pauline Rhodes has also become a regular part of the Michael Lett programme.[22]

Selected exhibitions edit

  • Martin Creed Work No 329: Half the air in a given space. (2006) Turner Prize winning artist Martin Creed half-filled Michael Lett’s original Karangahape Road space with pink balloons.[23]
  • Simon Denny: Starting from behind. (2009)[24]
  • Hany Armanious: Set Down. (2013)[25]
  • Michael Stevenson Proof of the Devil. (2013)[26]
  • Implicated and Immune. (2013) Group show.[27][28]
  • Julian Dashper again and again, again. (2016) A re-creation of an exhibition initially curated by Mark Kirby and Julian Dashper. In 2006 for Aratoi Wairarapa Museum of Art and History.[29]
  • Living with Aids 1988 . (2018) by Fiona Clark.[30]
  • Giovanni Intra. (2018) Documentation from Intra’s archives and a selection of artworks had  Alex Davidson comment in the magazine Artforum, ‘… these material products of his early thought do offer new insights into the bearing of his life’s work, and as such it is significant that they are seen here together for the first time.‘[31]
  • Ian Scott Realist Paintings from the Late 1960s. (2019) Scott died in 2013 and this exhibition brought together a review of his early work.[32]
  • Douglas Wright: the Envoys. (2020)[33]

Controversy edit

What can only be described as Pickle Mania struck the gallery in 2022. When artist Matthew Griffin threw a pickle up at the ceiling of the Karangahape gallery where it stayed stuck as part of an art installation the action was not only reported locally, but also globally in The Guardian,[34] the Daily Mail, The Times[35] and NBC News Today.[36]

Selected Michael Lett publications edit

  • Michael Parekōwhai (2007)
  • The Estate of L Budd: Catalogue of Existent Works ( 2008)
  • Jim Allen Poetry for Chainsaws & Hanging by a Thread II (2009)
  • Julian Dashper: This is not Writing ( 2011)
  • Affirmation Dungeon, by Dan Arps (2012) with Clouds Publishing
  • Anthony Byrt Simon Denny: The Founder's Paradox a Compendium (2017)
  • Fiona Clark: Living with Aids 1988 (2018)
  • Imogen Taylor (2022)
  • Michael Lett Documents 2021–2023 (2023)

External links edit

Official website www.michaellett.com

References edit

  1. ^ a b Oliver, Henry (Spring 2023). "The Curation of Michael Lett". Metro Magazine (440): 174.
  2. ^ Poppelwell, Louise (2 April 2003). "Art Space with a Difference". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 19 January 2022.
  3. ^ "Exhibitions". Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  4. ^ "Coastal Signs". Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  5. ^ "Art News". Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  6. ^ "The Art Paper". Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  7. ^ McNamara, T.J. (21 May 2011). "Good Reason to Tackle the Stairs". New Zealand Herald.
  8. ^ Hurrell, John (14 February 2011). "et al. at New Lett Venue". EyeContact. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  9. ^ Amery, Mark (December 2016). "Michael Lett: Ahead of the Curve". Art Collector Magazine.
  10. ^ McNamara, T.J. "Into the Depths". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  11. ^ Hurrell, John (10 September 2013). "Stevenson at Lett". EyeContact Magazine.
  12. ^ "An Art Gallery's Stylish New Auckland Home". Home Magazine.
  13. ^ Rose of Sharon Leake (28 April 2022). "Michael Lett Announces New Project Space". Art Collector. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  14. ^ "East Street Mission Hall". Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  15. ^ "Jim Allen: Poetry for Chainsaws". Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  16. ^ "Michael Stevenson: Waiting for the Other Shoe to Drop, Seating Proposal for a Grant Maker". Collector.
  17. ^ "Thinking Out loud". Art Now. 24 March 2023. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  18. ^ Denby, Mark (18 January 2024). "Kapa haka by Michael Parekowhai". Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  19. ^ Eastmond, Elizabeth (Spring 2023). "The Direct Source of Truth: a Visit with et al". Art New Zealand. 187: 84.
  20. ^ "Aotearoa Father of Experimental Art, Tributes Flow in After Passing of Jim Allen". The Big Idea. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  21. ^ Knell, Conor; Chumko, André (14 June 2023). "Visual artist Jim Allen dies, aged 100". Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  22. ^ Hurrell, John (16 March 2019). "Visceral Jostling". Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  23. ^ Clifford, Andrew (10 October 2006). "Bypassing the Thinking Process". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  24. ^ Hurrell, John (30 September 2009). "Aqua Mass Media". Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  25. ^ McNamara, T.J. "Light and Illumination". Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  26. ^ Hurrell, John (10 September 2013). "Stevenson at Lett". Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  27. ^ Knight, Kim (2 February 2015). "Artists in Aid Mission". Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  28. ^ Hurrell, John (18 February 2015). "Aids and Gay Pride in 2015". EyeContact Magazine. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  29. ^ Hurrell, John (13 May 2016). "More and More (and More) Dashper". Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  30. ^ Herk, David (3 June 2018). "Unseen Albums Document how Aids Affected Four New Zealanders in 1988". Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  31. ^ Davidson, Alex (March 2018). "Giovanni Intra". Art Forum.
  32. ^ Hurrell, John (20 September 2019). "Ian Scott Paintings". Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  33. ^ "The Envoys". Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  34. ^ Corlett, Eva (27 July 2022). "Flung Pickle Token: Artist Asks $10000 for McDonald's Ingredient". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  35. ^ Callery, James (28 July 2022). "McDonald's pickle stuck to ceiling is £5,000 'art'". Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  36. ^ Lamour, Joseph (2 August 2022). "An artist threw the pickle from a McDonald's burger on a ceiling — and is charging $6,325 for it". NBC Today. Retrieved 18 January 2024.

michael, lett, gallery, michael, lett, gallery, dealing, contemporary, that, operates, tāmaki, makaurau, auckland, zealand, gallery, established, michael, lett, 2003, since, 2015, been, joined, director, part, owner, andrew, thomas, michael, lett, great, north. Michael Lett is a gallery dealing in contemporary art that operates in Tamaki Makaurau Auckland New Zealand The gallery was established by Michael Lett in 2003 and since 2015 he has been joined by co director and part owner Andrew Thomas Michael Lett gallery Michael Lett at the Great North Road site 2013Established2003Location312 Karangahape RoadTypeContemporary art dealer galleryWebsitehttps michaellett com Contents 1 History 2 Artists 3 Exhibitions 3 1 Selected exhibitions 4 Controversy 5 Selected Michael Lett publications 6 External links 7 ReferencesHistory editMichael Lett opened his eponymous gallery in a ground floor space on the corner of Karangahape Road and Edinburgh Street Tamaki Makaurau Auckland in 2003 Lett had previously worked for art dealers Anna Bibby and Sue Crockford and was with the Gow Langsford Gallery when he decided to open his own business 1 The gallery was initially founded in partnership with the artist Michael Parekōwhai and opened with Dive an exhibition by Steve Carr 2 The second exhibition Views of Space with the Australian artist Hany Armanious gave some indication of the breadth of artists Lett intended to pursue 3 From 2008 to 2011 Lett was assisted by Sarah Hopkinson who has described Michael Lett as a place to see serious exhibitions by serious artists 1 Hopkinson after leaving Michael Lett would go on to develop her own gallery presence in Auckland at Costal Signs 4 Lett has attracted other assistants who have gone on to make their own mark in the visual arts including Ryan Moore now director of his own gallery Fine Arts Sydney and Becky Hemus editor of Art News 5 and The Art Paper 6 nbsp Mike Hewson installation Fountains at East Street 2024Michael Lett remained on Karangahape Road until 2011 when it moved to a large space on the Great North Road 7 Art critic John Hurrell described the first exhibition trans cryption by the artist collective et al as an exciting exhibition to explore and a useful way of getting acquainted with Lett s new space 8 Andrew Thomas who had previously worked with Hamish McKay in Wellington and White Cube in London joined the gallery and later becomes partner and co owner 9 The increased space allowed the gallery to offer artists the opportunity to show large scale works and installations not possible in the more restricted Karangahape Road site for example the combined exhibition of Michael Parekōwhai and et al in collaboration with Anya Henis and Samuel Holloway in 2013 10 and Michael Stevenson s installation Proof of the Devil in 2013 11 The gallery returned to Karangahape Road in 2014 siting itself on the bottom floor of an old bank building on the corner of East Street 12 In 2022 the gallery took over a hall next door to use as a project space 13 The Methodist Mission Hall had been opened in 1909 and designed by Alexander Wiseman 14 Early projects have included a recreation of Jim Allen s performance Poetry for Chainsaws 15 Michael Stevenson s installation Waiting for the Other Shoe to Drop Seating Proposal for a Grant Maker 16 and Kate Newby s installation Had Us Running With You 17 Artists edit nbsp Jim Allen performance piece at the Karangahape Road gallery 2014The current list of artists 2024 represented by Michael Lett are Anouska Akel et al Seraphine PickJim Allen Richard Frater Ian ScottHany Armanious Gavin Hipkins Sriwhana SpongDan Arps Zac Langdon Pole Michael StevensonSteve Carr Paul Lee Peter StichburyFiona Clark Judy Millar Imogen TaylorStella Corkery Kate Newby Kalisolate UhilaMartin Creed Michael Parekōwhai Cerith Wyn EvansJulian Dashper Campbell PattersonSimon Denny Oliver PerkinsExhibitions editFrom the last show of its first year of operation Michael Parekōwhai s Kapa Haka five life sized figures posing as security guards in the gallery s street facing window 18 to et al s 2023 installation I am the Direct Source of Truth that introduced itself with a waste paper bin full of bulldog clips 19 Michael Lett has also demonstrated a strong interest in representing a wide range of work by important contemporary artists The gallery has also shown an interest in promoting recent art history and first showed work by Jim Allen the influential teacher and artist within three years of opening 20 Since that time Lett has regularly featured Allen who was 83 when he first performed at the gallery The work exhibited was a re creation by Allen of his performance piece Poetry for Chainsaws that was first shown in 1976 at the Experimental Art Foundation in Adelaide Australia Since then Allen performed and exhibited a mix of recreated and new works until his death in 2023 21 More recently the work of Pauline Rhodes has also become a regular part of the Michael Lett programme 22 Selected exhibitions edit Martin Creed Work No 329 Half the air in a given space 2006 Turner Prize winning artist Martin Creed half filled Michael Lett s original Karangahape Road space with pink balloons 23 Simon Denny Starting from behind 2009 24 Hany Armanious Set Down 2013 25 Michael Stevenson Proof of the Devil 2013 26 Implicated and Immune 2013 Group show 27 28 Julian Dashper again and again again 2016 A re creation of an exhibition initially curated by Mark Kirby and Julian Dashper In 2006 for Aratoi Wairarapa Museum of Art and History 29 Living with Aids 1988 2018 by Fiona Clark 30 Giovanni Intra 2018 Documentation from Intra s archives and a selection of artworks had Alex Davidson comment in the magazine Artforum these material products of his early thought do offer new insights into the bearing of his life s work and as such it is significant that they are seen here together for the first time 31 Ian Scott Realist Paintings from the Late 1960s 2019 Scott died in 2013 and this exhibition brought together a review of his early work 32 Douglas Wright the Envoys 2020 33 Controversy editWhat can only be described as Pickle Mania struck the gallery in 2022 When artist Matthew Griffin threw a pickle up at the ceiling of the Karangahape gallery where it stayed stuck as part of an art installation the action was not only reported locally but also globally in The Guardian 34 the Daily Mail The Times 35 and NBC News Today 36 Selected Michael Lett publications editMichael Parekōwhai 2007 The Estate of L Budd Catalogue of Existent Works 2008 Jim Allen Poetry for Chainsaws amp Hanging by a Thread II 2009 Julian Dashper This is not Writing 2011 Affirmation Dungeon by Dan Arps 2012 with Clouds Publishing Anthony Byrt Simon Denny The Founder s Paradox a Compendium 2017 Fiona Clark Living with Aids 1988 2018 Imogen Taylor 2022 Michael Lett Documents 2021 2023 2023 External links editOfficial website www michaellett comReferences edit a b Oliver Henry Spring 2023 The Curation of Michael Lett Metro Magazine 440 174 Poppelwell Louise 2 April 2003 Art Space with a Difference New Zealand Herald Retrieved 19 January 2022 Exhibitions Retrieved 18 January 2024 Coastal Signs Retrieved 18 January 2024 Art News Retrieved 18 January 2024 The Art Paper Retrieved 18 January 2024 McNamara T J 21 May 2011 Good Reason to Tackle the Stairs New Zealand Herald Hurrell John 14 February 2011 et al at New Lett Venue EyeContact Retrieved 18 January 2024 Amery Mark December 2016 Michael Lett Ahead of the Curve Art Collector Magazine McNamara T J Into the Depths New Zealand Herald Retrieved 18 January 2024 Hurrell John 10 September 2013 Stevenson at Lett EyeContact Magazine An Art Gallery s Stylish New Auckland Home Home Magazine Rose of Sharon Leake 28 April 2022 Michael Lett Announces New Project Space Art Collector Retrieved 18 January 2024 East Street Mission Hall Retrieved 18 January 2024 Jim Allen Poetry for Chainsaws Retrieved 18 January 2024 Michael Stevenson Waiting for the Other Shoe to Drop Seating Proposal for a Grant Maker Collector Thinking Out loud Art Now 24 March 2023 Retrieved 18 January 2024 Denby Mark 18 January 2024 Kapa haka by Michael Parekowhai Te Ara the Encyclopedia of New Zealand Retrieved 18 January 2024 Eastmond Elizabeth Spring 2023 The Direct Source of Truth a Visit with et al Art New Zealand 187 84 Aotearoa Father of Experimental Art Tributes Flow in After Passing of Jim Allen The Big Idea Retrieved 18 January 2024 Knell Conor Chumko Andre 14 June 2023 Visual artist Jim Allen dies aged 100 Retrieved 18 January 2024 Hurrell John 16 March 2019 Visceral Jostling Retrieved 18 January 2024 Clifford Andrew 10 October 2006 Bypassing the Thinking Process New Zealand Herald Retrieved 18 January 2024 Hurrell John 30 September 2009 Aqua Mass Media Retrieved 18 January 2024 McNamara T J Light and Illumination Retrieved 18 January 2024 Hurrell John 10 September 2013 Stevenson at Lett Retrieved 18 January 2024 Knight Kim 2 February 2015 Artists in Aid Mission Retrieved 18 January 2024 Hurrell John 18 February 2015 Aids and Gay Pride in 2015 EyeContact Magazine Retrieved 18 January 2024 Hurrell John 13 May 2016 More and More and More Dashper Retrieved 18 January 2024 Herk David 3 June 2018 Unseen Albums Document how Aids Affected Four New Zealanders in 1988 Retrieved 18 January 2024 Davidson Alex March 2018 Giovanni Intra Art Forum Hurrell John 20 September 2019 Ian Scott Paintings Retrieved 18 January 2024 The Envoys Retrieved 18 January 2024 Corlett Eva 27 July 2022 Flung Pickle Token Artist Asks 10000 for McDonald s Ingredient The Guardian Retrieved 18 January 2024 Callery James 28 July 2022 McDonald s pickle stuck to ceiling is 5 000 art Retrieved 18 January 2024 Lamour Joseph 2 August 2022 An artist threw the pickle from a McDonald s burger on a ceiling and is charging 6 325 for it NBC Today Retrieved 18 January 2024 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Michael Lett gallery amp oldid 1211578967, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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