NO 1 PARNELL
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    • Te Ha - The Breath
    • Ka Mua, Ka Muri: Mike Cameron
    • Backwoods
    • Suggestions For Mud: Jude Blades
    • Kaleidoscopic: Marie Greeks
    • Maps and Journeys - Anthony Savill
    • Charles Dawes Photography
    • New Landscapes: Sean McDonnell
    • Janette Cervin
    • Hokianga 6
    • Lindsay Antrobus Evans
    • Julie Battisti
    • The Ground on Which We Stand
    • The Hidden Path - Chris Verryt
    • Swan Song
    • Land
    • Te Whakanui I Te Tau Kotahi O Te Toi Torangapu - Celebrating One Year of Political Art
    • Bruce Anderson
Picture

A Certain Sinister Perception

Lindsay Antrobus Evans
No.1 Parnell Gallery 01/09/2018 – 04/10/2018
 
Once Upon A Time In A Distant Land, in a primary school, I was asked what I'd like to be when I grew up. My heart was set on training to be a teacher.
I was informed that being left-handed would make this impossible, so over the next two years during class I had my left arm tied to my side so that it was unusable. They were training me, breaking me in, teaching me the Right Way, the appropriate way, the essential way.
 
What I learnt was that I am inherently and innately wrong.
Over the following years I have also learnt that I am physically, culturally, religiously and spiritually wrong.
 
Most human cultures despise and deride the left side, their languages indicate a preference for the right and a disdain for the 10% of the population who are born left-handed...

Left

Cack-handed

Ambidextrous

Sinister

Gauche

Taha mate

Linkisch

Mancino

MollyDooker
lyft - weak

the shit covered hand

both right hands

left Latin evil, threatening

awkward, clumsy

not Right, not Life

awkward, maladroit

crooked, maimed

queer-fisted
​
​Old English

Colloquial English

Latin

English

French

Maori

German

Italian

Australian
My art practice spurs me on to seek out that elusive 10% of 'truth' that society obfuscates. Once I conceive of a work, I follow it up by embracing and indulging in the process of research. This enables me to draw out the 10% that isn't immediately obvious. And later when physically making the work, which often includes injuries from the awkwardness of right-handed tools, I conceal the expression of my own 'truths'.
 
The work is then rendered palateable for the viewing public by the obfuscation of my own Alterity.
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  • Home
  • Lindsay Antrobus Evans
  • Carolyn Lye
  • Art Online
  • Residency
  • About
    • Our Values, Our People
    • Our Story
  • Contact
  • Exhibit with us!
  • Previous Exhibitions
    • Brenda Moir
    • Denise Batchelor - Reflections
    • Tony Johnston - Rawene Threefold
    • Susan Dey
    • Heather Randerson
    • Nigel Brown
    • Lisa Thompson
    • Kristin Ivill
    • Prue MacDougall
    • Tony Johnston
    • Matariki 2023
    • Conversations of the Heart
    • Exhibition - 'being'
    • Breaching the Surface
    • Freedom to Fly
    • Rebecca Barclay-Clist
    • Denis Bourke - Survey
    • Matariki 2022 - Awakening
    • 'Water' Brenda Moir Online
    • 'The First Footprint' Graeme Butler
    • Te Hauhake - Harvesting
    • Sea Things - Robyn Gibson
    • Flat Pack - Whakapapa - Maureen Lander
    • Hokianga to Tatou Kainga >
      • Lindsay Antrobus Evans
      • Joanne Barrett
      • Liz McAuliffe
      • Tira
      • Michelle Morunga
      • Peter Elsbury
      • Riki Bowler
    • Te Ha - The Breath
    • Ka Mua, Ka Muri: Mike Cameron
    • Backwoods
    • Suggestions For Mud: Jude Blades
    • Kaleidoscopic: Marie Greeks
    • Maps and Journeys - Anthony Savill
    • Charles Dawes Photography
    • New Landscapes: Sean McDonnell
    • Janette Cervin
    • Hokianga 6
    • Lindsay Antrobus Evans
    • Julie Battisti
    • The Ground on Which We Stand
    • The Hidden Path - Chris Verryt
    • Swan Song
    • Land
    • Te Whakanui I Te Tau Kotahi O Te Toi Torangapu - Celebrating One Year of Political Art
    • Bruce Anderson