New publication extends important exhibition
The Govett-Brewster Art Gallery's 2024 exhibition Set Dressing presented three generations of artists, examining photography’s capacity to harness, distil, and complicate desire. A new publication builds on this conversation.
In 1985, Christine Hellyar produced her first set of Apron sculptures, cotton garments on which were sewn latex casts of food—a plucked chicken, kūmara, flounder, squid, tripe. The artist conceived of these works as objects to be worn. To this end, she commissioned Gary Cocker, then a student at Elam School of Fine Arts, to capture the aprons in use.
Presenting these images for the first time since their original exhibition, Set Dressing — staged at the Govett-Brewster Art Gallery from March–June 2024 — includes Cocker’s photographs of Hellyar’s sculptures in conversation with works by Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland-based photographer Cao Xun
This new companion publication, published by the Govett-Brewster Art Gallery / Len Lye Centre, features an expanded selection of Cocker’s images, alongside works by Cao from the first decade of his developing career.
Texts by Priscilla Pitts, Kirsty Baker and Samuel Te Kani explore in depth Hellyar and Cao’s practices, while a conversation between Gary Cocker and the exhibition's curator Simon Gennard offers insight into Cocker’s artistic life in Tāmaki Makaurau between the mid-1980s and early-1990s. Additionally, the publication includes an introductory essay by Gennard, as well as an afterword by Dr Zara Stanhope.