Strangely Familiar: Portraits by Wayne Youle

The fun is trying to guess when you visit Wayne Youle's exhibition of Strangely Familiar portraits.
Frances Speer
Published on May 29, 2017
Updated on May 29, 2017

Overview

Artist Wayne Youle likes to play around with cultural icons and identity; he once made series of lolly pop hei tiki ('tiki pops') as a tongue-in-cheek but seriously compelling comment on the commercialisation of Maori culture.

This time Youle has taken portraits of well-known New Zealand arts and culture personalities and applied a pop art treatment to simplify the famous faces into flattened graphic shapes. Hair, noses, ears and eyes become solid blocks of colour, yet fascinatingly, we can still piece these parts together and recognise the faces. Artist Ralph Hotere, architect Ian Athfield, comedian Billy T James, and author Margaret Mahy are among the 34 portraits on display.

Strangely Familiar is on show at the New Zealand Portrait Gallery, an exhibition space in a spruced-up brick shed on Wellington's waterfront. The Gallery serves up a frequently changing exhibition programe of contemporary and historical portraiture in mediums both traditional and modern. NZPG shows are often free of charge and are a great way to spend a rainy lunch break or as a palate cleanser during a weekend afternoon of shopping along Lambton Quay.

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