
Artwork Information
Laurence Aberhart's 8 x 10 inch Korona view camera is one of the most exacting tools available to any camera artist. It produces negative of astonishing detail, but requires complete self-awareness in framing the view. In 1986, Aberhart lived in Wanganui as artist-in-residence at the Sarjeant Gallery. During a twelve-month period, he made many photographs of Taranaki, the perfect cone-shaped mountain that has always defined the region's identity. Here, the spherical roof of the observatory, the curiously hand-painted sign, the inexplicably covered windows and the miniaturised scale of the mountain are all elements in a tableau which seems to announce a forthcoming presence. As Aberhart has noted about his concerns: 'I have a belief in the power and beauty of the photograph . . . A belief that a photograph is able to achieve transcendence from this time, this place and the object that it apparently is, to become something "other". I feel that it is my duty as a photographer to strive to be the agent in the process of making this thing, this photograph, lose the entrapments of this time, this place, this object and achieve that transcendent, precious other'. (from The Guide, 2001)
- Artist
- Laurence Aberhart
- Title
- Taranaki (The Heavens Declare the Glory of God) New Plymouth, 14 May 1986
- Production Date
- 1986
- Medium
- black and white photograph
- Dimensions
- 191 x 242 mm
- Credit Line
- Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, purchased 1987
- Accession No
- 1987/36/4
- Copyright
- Copying restrictions apply
- Department
- New Zealand Art
- Display Status
- Not on display
More by Laurence Aberhart (161)

Last light, Opunake, Taranaki, 22 March 1993
1993

Interior: Church of the Transformation, Tautoro, North Island, 20 April 1982
1982

Interior: 'Tehupiomatatua', Te Totara, Bay of Plenty, 7 June 1982
1982

Midway Beach, Gisborne, 13 June 1986
1986
Explore Connections (7)

Mountains
333 Artworks

Observatories
2 Artworks

Windows
286 Artworks

Roofs
111 Artworks

Religion
24 Artworks