Michelle Mayn
Kuruwaka & Sack, 2021
Sun dried kuruwaka/seed capsules (New Zealand flax, Phormium tenax); sack (polypropylene) from wood fire with mother during winter of 2020; step-grandmothers hessian sack; hemp and wool
500 x 800 x 95 mm
Copyright The Artist
Michelle Mayn works within the realms of textile, crafting, Māori weaving and installation. Mayn draws on manually time-intensive and universal methods of weaving, binding, twining and knotting to create ephemeral...
Michelle Mayn works within the realms of textile, crafting, Māori weaving and installation.
Mayn draws on manually time-intensive and universal methods of weaving, binding, twining and knotting to create ephemeral object-based installations and sculptures. Large-scale intraactive installations further utilise air, wind, light, gravity, tension and other unseen forces to activate material, thereby bringing the material to life. Kuruwaka & Sacks stitches together three generations of matrilineal relationships. A hessian sack carries the earthy essence of a beloved step-grandmother, forming a foundation for writhing pods emptied of their fertile seed. Harakeke seed capsules, gathered and dried over long summer days are laid over plastic red sacking - whose wood proffered warmth to Mayn’s mother and her, on a cold pandemic night. Red flickers in a burst of vibrant, feminal colour, constrained within the symbolic dimensions of a hearth. Each material mnemonic contains notions of feminal wisdom quietly gathered through the seasonal rhythms of life.
Mayn holds a Masters of Visual Arts with Honours (First Class), Auckland University of Technology (2020); Traditional and Contemporary Māori Weaving, Unitec (2011). Recent exhibitions include Unifying Threads, mothermother Iteration 32, Te Atamira, Queenstown; CONTEXTILE, Contemporary Textile Art Biennial, Portugal (2022); Sculpture in the Garden, Outdoor Garden Trial, Auckland (2021-22).
Mayn draws on manually time-intensive and universal methods of weaving, binding, twining and knotting to create ephemeral object-based installations and sculptures. Large-scale intraactive installations further utilise air, wind, light, gravity, tension and other unseen forces to activate material, thereby bringing the material to life. Kuruwaka & Sacks stitches together three generations of matrilineal relationships. A hessian sack carries the earthy essence of a beloved step-grandmother, forming a foundation for writhing pods emptied of their fertile seed. Harakeke seed capsules, gathered and dried over long summer days are laid over plastic red sacking - whose wood proffered warmth to Mayn’s mother and her, on a cold pandemic night. Red flickers in a burst of vibrant, feminal colour, constrained within the symbolic dimensions of a hearth. Each material mnemonic contains notions of feminal wisdom quietly gathered through the seasonal rhythms of life.
Mayn holds a Masters of Visual Arts with Honours (First Class), Auckland University of Technology (2020); Traditional and Contemporary Māori Weaving, Unitec (2011). Recent exhibitions include Unifying Threads, mothermother Iteration 32, Te Atamira, Queenstown; CONTEXTILE, Contemporary Textile Art Biennial, Portugal (2022); Sculpture in the Garden, Outdoor Garden Trial, Auckland (2021-22).
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