
Artwork Information
W. D. Hammond is a world-maker, who creates a technological future-city with its own cast of characters. He often paints on found-surfaces and Japan 3, 4, 5 is painted on the back of a large metal sign. Hammond accepts the weathering of these recycled supports, which range from tents to tea-trays, as a contribution to his work. Prior to becoming a painter he made neon advertising signs and later designed and made wooden toys. He is also a musician and usually paints to the sound of rock music, 'turned up really loud'; rock music lyrics often appear in the titles of his paintings. Here calm traditional Japanese cultural images including Noh theatre masks and cherry blossom are contrasted with contemporary Manga comic imagery and liquid crystal display graphics. While the three sections of the work could represent a narrative, they could equally be the successive screens of an video-arcade game. There is a sense of hyperactivity as figures rush across the picture plane, as well as a neurotic quality suggested by the flattened and contradictory perspectives and spatial ambiguities between figure and ground. These confuse the eye and unsettle the mind and any visual naïvety or 'bad drawing' is intentional. There is a tense calligraphic elegance in the spiky lines and a general jittery unease in this particular 'Hammondland'. (from The Guide, 2001)
- Artist
- W D Hammond
- Title
- Japan 3, 4, 5
- Production Date
- 1992
- Medium
- oil on steel
- Dimensions
- 2140 x 1220 mm
- Credit Line
- Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, gift of the Patrons of the Auckland Art Gallery, 1992
- Accession No
- 1992/16
- Copyright
- Copying restrictions apply
- Department
- New Zealand Art
- Display Status
- Not on display
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