reTHiNK What's On Your Plate

3 March - 7 April 2012

10.30am Saturday March 3 

Colour of Distance and What’s on Your Plate are both multidisciplinary collaborative projects that combine exhibition objects, publications and community-based public programmes. The prints, sculptures, photographs and paintings of the five contemporary artists that converge in Colour of Distance explore narratives of memory, place, displacement and kinship. Meanwhile, What’s on your Plate presents a variety of outcomes from a participatory assignment using the idea of a plate as a metaphor for the act of sharing as well as referring to versions of the adage “I have a lot on my plate”.

The exhibitions run from 3 March to 7 April 2012.

Colour of Distance

Helga Goran | Kim Lowe | Jocelyn Mills | Cristina Silaghi | Celia Wilson

Public programmes:

  • A painting workshop with Celia Wilson // 1pm Tuesday March 6
  • A conversation and afternoon tea with Kim Lowe and Cristina Silaghi // 3pm Wednesday March 21

What’s on your Plate?

Amy Mackinnon | Carolyn Milbank | Christina Read | Clare Lewis | Colleen Altagracia | Eileen Leung | Eliza Sagar | Fuyuko Akiyoshi | James King | Kate Muggeridge | Matthew Crookes | Meiling Lee | Richard Orjis | Sara Duck | Sierra de la Croix

Public programmes:

  • Toi Ora Express Music event // 12.30pm Thursday March 8
  • Reading Out Loud // 1.30pm Tuesday April 3

What’s on Your Plate was made possible with the generous support of Creative Communities, Like Minds, Like Mine and Mind & Body’s “reTHiNK"

  ALL WELCOME FREE ENTRY TO EXHIBITIONS AND RELATED EVENTS  

Location/venue: 

Papakura Art Gallery

10 Averill Street

Papakura

Date: 
3 Mar 2012 - 7 Apr 2012
Cost: 
Free
Entry details: 

Exhibition opening from 10:30 on Saturday 3 March. 

Gallery open  9 - 5 Monday - Friday and 10 - 2 Saturday. 

Contact details: 

tracey.williams@aucklandcouncil.govt.nz // 09 297 7510 

Member Profile

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    reTHiNK

    We are working to change the way our community thinks about mental illness / unwellness / distress / being human.

    Nearly half the population will have one of these experiences in their life-times. Stigma and discrimination will be among the biggest barriers we face on our journey to recovery.

    reTHiNK is here to help you understand that mental unwellness is normal, common and can be recovered from. We are an Auckland provider of the national Like Minds Like Mine programme, funded by the Ministry of Health.

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