Green Structure 2
Biography: 

Richard Maloy, New Zealand

Auckland artist Richard Maloy employs a fascination with the fine details of the materials and processes involved in art making. As an exploration and exposure of the creation of artwork the artist often uses such base materials as cardboard, plastic bags, tape, butter and discarded timber. Because Maloy works in various media, his installations often integrate elements of performance and sculptural production. Examining the action involved behind the production of an artwork, Maloy often blurs the many boundaries imposed upon an artist. Playing with the traditional notions of art making, Maloy engages with the spaces commonly used for viewing art and draws the viewer into his process. Maloy’s physical presence and his engagement with the viewing audience form a frequently integral part of the experience of his artworks.

In Maloy’s recent exhibition Raw Attempts, the artist used ARTSPACE, Auckland simultaneously as a gallery and a studio, developing large-scale sculptural forms over a period of 85 days.  During a residence in 2008 at Artspace, Sydney, Maloy created Yellow Grotto which was then shown as part of Maloy’s solo show at Sue Crockford Gallery, 2008, followed by The Physics Room, 2008. Other recent projects include: Accommodate, St. Paul St, Auckland, 2006; World Famous in New Zealand, Canberra Contemporary Art Space, Australia, 2005; Remember New Zealand, Sao Paulo Biennial, Brazil, 2004 and The Future of Auckland, ARTSPACE, Auckland, 2002. His work is held in the permanent collections of Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki, Auckland; Chartwell Collection, Auckland; Peter Fay Collection, Sydney, Australia; Wallace Arts Trust, Auckland; Pricewaterhouse Coopers, Auckland; and Art Gallery of New South Wales, Australia. The Winner of the 2009 Fulbright Wallace Arts Trust Award the artist recently completed a three month residency at Headlands Center for the Arts in the Marin Headlands, San Francisco.

Using different spaces of central Christchurch as the setting for 45 Attempts at Making Sculpture, a mobile sculpture project, Richard Maloy had planned to produce a new cardboard sculpture every day during the six weeks of SCAPE.

The artist aimed to engage with the urban space day after day unfolding (and refolding) cardboard into new sculptures, bringing art to public space.

Re-located to Auckland, Maloy condensed his focused ‘attempts’ down to five days, and engaged with the public spaces surrounding the Viaduct Events Centre. 

Location - around the Viaduct Events Centre

Dates - Wednesday 3 August - 7pm - 10.30pm, Thursday 4 August - 11am - 6pm, Friday 5 August - 11am - 8pm, Saturday 6 and Sunday 7 August - 10am - 6pm

Video - http://www.scapebiennial.org.nz/2011-video

Further Information: www.suecrockford.com

 

Richard Maloy All I Want To Be Is A Sculpture #1, 2009, Courtesy the artist and Sue Crockford Gallery