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Gow Langsford Gallery

Gow Langsford Gallery

Exhibitions

Max Gimblett

Max Gimblett_Tropics of Graham Sutherland_200809
Max Gimblett Chinese Wedding 2008
Max Gimblett_Glass Castle
Max Gimblett_Golden Silence
Max Gimblett_The Touch Between Man and God_2008-09
Max Gimblett_Abbot_2009
Max Gimblett_The Washing of 10,000 Tides_2008-09
Max Gimblett_The Trace of the Master_2008-09
Max Gimblett_Maui Trickster_2008
Max Gimblett_5 Realms_2008-09
Max Gimblett Magpie Wild 2 2008-9
Max Gimblett_Odyssues_2008-09
Max Gimblett_The Dragon and the Tiger_2009
Max Gimblett_The Place of the Way_2008
Max Gimblett_Upstream - After Ernest Hemingway_2009
Max Gimblett_Walk On_2008-09
Max Gimblett Harlequin Parade 2009
Max Gimblett_Wild Waters Drive_2009
Max Gimblett Full Fathom Five 2009
Max Gimblett Full Fathom Five 2009
Max Gimblett Full Fathom Five 2009
Max Gimblett Full Fathom Five 2009

full fathom five
5 May - 29 May 2009

Max Gimblett is one of few New Zealander'd to exhibit at the Guggenheim Museum, New York City. His recent inclusion in The Third Mind is milestone in recent New Zealand art history is directly followed by his exhibition full fathom five at Gow Langsford Gallery.  The exhibition presents a collection of new paintings in his signature style of luscious surfaces, shaped canvases and fluid brushwork. 

His recent works are fueled by what Gimblett refers to as an awakening of Western culture towards Asia, Asian art and the ideas synonymous with its culture and history.  Gimbletts study of Jungian psychology, Asian traditions and art-making practices began in the 1960s and has remained constant throughout his career. It is through the practice of Zen calligraphy that Gimblett conceives his spontaneous, "all mind/no mind" gestures. He responds instinctively and seemingly mercilessly to the canvas, creating intense gestural brush strokes.  His engagement with Buddhism gives such mark making techniques a paradoxical reading as they become both a unique impression left by the artist, and egoless. 

full fathom five takes its title from Shakespeares The Tempest and relates to the spiritual in art, to which Gimblett gives paramount importance. The ideas of rebirth and spiritual symbolism including the mystery of the father can be seen in the reflected light on the surfaces and gilded edges of recent works. These create halos of light signifying an aura and spiritual sense of being.

Alongside his Eastern influences, Gimblett is acutely aware of the Western traditions in which his work is created and aligns his practices also with American art history, most notably painters Jackson Pollock and William de Kooning.  

This exhibition presents an exquisite collection of new works by a visionary painter.