Teststrip
Teststrip was an artist run gallery that operated in Auckland, New Zealand from 1992 to 1997.
History
In late 1992 the artists Kirsty Cameron, Judy Darragh, Gail Haffern, Giovanni Intra, Denise Kum, Lucy Macdonald, Daniel Malone and Merylyn Tweedie formed the artist collective Teststrip.[1] The Teststrip Gallery was opened the same year on the second floor of 10 Vulcan Lane in Auckland’s CBD where Daniel Malone was living at the time. In mid 1994 the gallery relocated to the first floor of 454 Karangahape Road. The new space had two galleries upstairs and a shop window exhibition space at street level.[2] Writer and artist Stella Brennan described Teststrip as, “Sassy, careerist and self-aware, by its persistent charm Teststrip alerted others to the possible joys of running a gallery.”[3]
Exhibitions
The first Teststrip exhibition in November 1992 was entitled Stock Show and included seven of the eight Teststrip members. In 1992 and early 1993 exhibitions were largely confined to the Teststrip collective members.[4] Another early exhibition, this time also demonstrating Teststrip’s ambitious attitude, had nine of the artists travel to Wellington in March 1993 to present Teststrip on tour a group exhibition at Cubewell House in Wellington. Writer Stuart McKenzie noted that Teststrip shared, “a nostalgia for the avant-gard” and that, “the best of Teststrip is both iconoclastic and commanding.”[5] Over the next five years, including an ongoing series of street front windows installations, Teststrip would present over 160 exhibitions.[6] By 1994 a wider range of artists were being asked to exhibit including Matthew Hyland, Simon Cumming Ronnie van Hout, Billy Apple, Fiona Amundsen, Mikala Dwyer, Yuk King Tan and Annie O’Neill.[7] In May 1997 a Teststrip Window exhibition by artist Peter Robinson, a painting entitled Pākehā have Rights too featuring a Nazi swastika, caused controversy when it was covered in protesting graffiti.[8] The last exhibition at Teststrip, Gold Watch: new work from the Teststrip Board included four of the original Teststrip members Cameron, Darragh, Kum and Malone plus Simon Cumming who had been with the group for most of the journey.[6]
Publishing
Many of the Teststrip exhibitions were accompanied by a small publication often back grounding the exhibition and produced as a series of publications presented as Teststrip Micrographs. The first of these was Pose compiled by Giovanni Intra and Susan Hillary for their exhibition of the same name in 1994. In all 26 Teststrip Micrographs were published in three series. The last Teststrip Micrograph was compiled by Daniel Malone for his exhibition malone@artspace in 2003. Matthew Hyland in reviewing Micrographs 1-10 outlines the history of their production describing them as, "distilling [art’s] essence so that the consumer has total control over her intake."[9]
Archive
A full list of all Teststrip exhibitions can be found in the book Teststrip: the history of an artist run space (1992-1997) and an archive of all issues of the Teststrip Micrographs is held at the E H McCormick Research Library, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki.[10]
References
- ^ Hammond, Catherine; McBride, Caroline (2016). "Teststrip-nostalgia-for-the-avant-garde". Auckland Art Gallery Toi Tāmaki. Retrieved 22 August 2022.
- ^ Butt, Danny. "Teststrip". Log Illustrated. 4: 6–7.
- ^ Brennan, Stella (7 February 1998). "Five Glorious Years". New Zealand Listener: 43.
- ^ Amery, Mark (July 1993). "Teststrip Tease". New Zealand Listener: 42.
- ^ McKenzie, Stewart (April 1993). "Teststrip to Cubewell". Stamp: 155–156.
- ^ a b Test trip : a history of an artist-run space (1992-1997). Teststrip Board. Auckland, N.Z.: Clouds. 2008. ISBN 978-0-9582789-6-6. OCLC 213480092.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: others (link) - ^ Strongman, Lara (1995). "Ani O'Neil and Yuk King Tan". Art + Text (51): 71–72.
- ^ Paton, Justin (April 1997). "Careering". New Zealand Listener: 45.
- ^ Hyland, Matthew (1997). "Toxic Empathy". Monica (Summer): 35.
- ^ "Teststrip Archive". E H McCormick Research Library, Auckland Art Gallery Toi Tāmaki. Retrieved 20 August 2022.