New Zealand painter, photographer and sculptor (born 1962)
Ronnie van Hout
Ronnie van Hout, 2003
Born
(1962-01-22) 22 January 1962 (age 62)
Christchurch
Nationality
New Zealand
Education
School of Fine Arts, Canterbury University, 1980 - 1982, Master of Fine Arts, RMIT University of Melbourne, 1999
Known for
Sculpture, video and installations
Ronnie van Hout (born 22 January 1962) is a New Zealand artist and musician living in Melbourne, Australia. He works across a wide variety of media including sculpture, video, painting, photography, embroidery, and sound recordings.
In the early eighties while still studying at the University of Canterbury School of Fine Arts, van Hout became involved in the Christchurch music scene. Initially he worked with The Pin Group, who were signed to Flying Nun Records, designing posters and filming them in action.[3] Roger Shepherd, owner of Flying Nun, described van Hout’s work as, ‘colorful Warholian images’.[4] He later described van Hout's cover for The Pin Group’s debut single "Ambivalence" as, ‘black on black and depicted an image of helicopters. An allusion to US “black ops” with clandestine undercover secret operations that were real when they were not conspiracy theories.'[5] Van Hout also produced printed material for other Flying Nun bands.[6]
Into The Void
From 1988 Van Hout was also a member of the band Into the Void.[7] Band member Paul Sutherland recalled, ‘Ronnie was just part of the scene, and so he just turned up, but it was pretty obvious he couldn’t play an instrument, so he became a singer and we were a band.’[8] Into the Void would also sign with Flying Nun Records[9] and still reunites occasionally, playing together as recently as 2016.[10]
Selected solo exhibitions
Van Hout has exhibited extensively, in Australia, New Zealand and internationally, at private and public galleries. His first solo exhibition was More for Less at City Limits café in Wellington and he was also included in the influential exhibition Hangover curated by Lara Strongman for the Waikato Museum and Art Gallery (now known as Waikato Museum Te Whare Taonga o Waikato) in 1993. He showed with the Auckland group Teststrip, as well as Gregory Flint Gallery, Hamish McKay Gallery, Gow Langsford Gallery, Ivan Anthony Gallery as well as Station and Darren Knight Gallery in Australia.
Father, Son, Holy Ghost, Manawatu Art Gallery (now known as Te Manawa). Reviewer Robin Neate commented of the exhibition that van Hout, ‘…conjured up as many meanings as you can bring to a work.’[11]
2003
I’ve Abandoned Me. This survey exhibition curated by Justin Paton at the Dunedin Public Art Gallery toured in 2003 and 2004 to Auckland, Wellington and Palmerston North.[12] Paton described van Hout’s career as, ‘[jutting] up on the horizon like a combined laboratory, hall of mirrors and haunted house.’[13]
2008
BED/SIT Artspace, Sydney. The gallery's brochure comments, 'The "furniture" represented in BED/SIT is fake furniture. It is also more than fake - it is double fake. What could be perceived as a representation of simple furniture is also a superficial copy of an artwork by American artist Robert Morris.'[14]
Ronnie van Hout: I've Seen Things, The Dowse Art Museum, Lower Hutt. The exhibition coincided with the installation of van Hout’s sculpture Fallen Robot in the courtyard outside the gallery.[18]
Public sculptures
Van Hout has also produced a number of large-scale or permanent public art works including:
2008
R.U.R. Titled after the 1921 play by Czech playwright Karel Capek, the first to popularise the term robot, R. U. R. lay prone, as though just having fallen outside the Royal Exhibition Building during the opening of the Melbourne Art Fair.[19] The work was later shown at Monash University.[20]
2001
Rear Window, Dunedin Public Art Gallery. The artist constantly opens the viewing window in a security door, but no-one is there.[21]
2018
A Loss Again, Te Papa's Sculpture terrace featured an installation by van Hout of two replicas of his father’s tool shed.[22]
2012
Fallen Robot, The 7.2m-long stainless steel sculpture of a prone robot is situated in the courtyard outside the Dowse Art Museum.[23]
2013
Coming Down.[24] Part of the Gallery project Populate, Van Hout told the Gallery, ‘'With the title Coming Down I wanted to capture multiple meanings. The falling down of buildings or sculptures; the idea that something in the sky is possibly coming down; and the idea that an experience is passing, and we are coming to ground from a high point.' [25]
2014
Dayton.[26] This reclining robot of aluminium and steel was installed at Monash University's Clayton campus.[27]
2016
Quasi in Christchurch.[28] The giant hand sculpture was first installed on the roof of the Christchurch Art Gallery Te Puna o Waiwhetu.[29]
2019
Quasi in Wellington. After its time on the Christchurch Art Gallery building Quasi was installed on the roof of City Gallery Wellington.[30] The media's response was mostly negative, with the BBC headlining, ‘Nightmare' Hand Statue Looms over New Zealand City.[31] The Wellington City Council responded, ‘This 'nightmare' is our delightful new resident and we won't hear a word against him. We love this little guy. So if you're not a fan I suggest you talk to the hand"[32]
Boy Walking. A giant boy in shorts and striped t-shirt heads purposefully through Potters Park in Auckland. Van Hout, who used to live in the area, explained that the oversized child is moving into the future with confidence and his sculpture was exploring the notion of a child transitioning into adulthood.[33] The work was installed overnight.[34]
Residencies and awards
A selection of van Hout's artist residencies and awards:
1996
A three month artist in residence at the Govett-Brewster Art Gallery and Taranaki Polytechnic in New Plymouth, New Zealand.[35]
1998
Creative New Zealand International Visual Art Residency. Van Hout attended the International Studio Programme in New York for four months.[36]
2004
Finalist Walters Prize, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki. Van Hout was represented by No Exit Parts 1 and 2, 2003 which was purchased by the Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki.[37] The title is from the Jean-Paul Sartre play of 1944 Huis Clos (No Exit). The Walters Prize jury said of van Hout's exhibition, ‘His works do something rare in the world of contemporary art - make you laugh but leave you strangely moved.’[38] The Judge was art academic and writer Robert Storr.[39]
2005
Creative New Zealand one year residency in Berlin at Kunstlerhaus Bethanien.[40] Van Hout recalled. 'It was only the New Zealanders who had been in residence in Berlin who actually made work. It's a different attitude [which was] seen as strangely old-fashioned…’[41] His exhibition at the Kunstlerhaus was an installation titled Back door and was described as, ‘devoted to memory and demonstrates – using an example from his own childhood – the impossibility of recalling one’s own history as a description of facts….’[42]
Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi Laureate Award. The Awards were established in 2000 to ‘celebrate and empower New Zealand’s most outstanding artists’. (Linda Herrick Top artists receive Laureate Awards.[43]
2007
Artists in Antarctica Programme. In November 2007 Ronnie van Hout and writer Tessa Duder traveled to Antarctica.[44] In one work resulting from his visit, van Hout used film he took of Scott’s Hut to re-enact scenes from the horror film The Thing.[45]
2008
Rita Angus Residency. The residency enables artists to live and work in the small cottage in Sydney Street West that Rita Angus used as a studio and home during her time in Wellington.[46]