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Ratanui 1978 / 2021

Ratanui 1978 / 2021

Anne Noble

Two Rooms
16 Putiki Street, Grey Lynn, Auckland

12 August - 10 September 2022

Reviewed by John Hurrell for EyeContact, August 2022

Anne Noble, Ratanui #1, Tarapuruhi, Whanganui, 1978/2021

Ratanui, a 500-year Northern Rata in the Tarapuruhi bush sanctuary north of Whanganui where Anne Noble grew up, provided the starting point for this photographic installation. Noble first photographed the tree in 1978 and, in the summer of 2021 while on the artist residency at Tylee Cottage Whanganui, she revisited the sanctuary to create new work from her earlier research. Noble entered the forest at night wearing a hunter’s camera and buried a length of film – a medium sensitive to the chemistry of earth and the passing of time – in the ground near Ratanui – a bid to map traces of visibile and invisible worlds.

The project evolved from her interest in how a colony of bees operates as one interconnected body. "Forests are similar and yet we see them comprised of single entities - like a population of human beings," she says. "I am fascinated by the invisible networks of exchange within the forest." Here, as with her bee works, science, language and art come together. The work reflects recent science suggesting that trees communicate through their roots and across fungi networks.

“An understanding of language as an inherent attribute of all living and non-living things, in turn suggests that language is an interconnecting force linking organisms, matter and phenomena within complex environments and systems. Perhaps then trees can be heard, and their language might be visualized as a strange inscribing of processes occurring over time that resound within and for a specific material community – like a forest.”


Please note that there will be no opening function for these exhibitions.



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