Chris Booth

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He has participated in numerous land art projects and exhibitions internationally and created significant public sculpture commissions in NZ, Australia, the Netherlands, the UK, Germany, Italy, Denmark, France and Canada.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".[1]

Early life

Booth was born in Kerikeri in the Bay of Islands. He studied at the University of Canterbury School of Fine Arts[2] before taking two years of specialist study in the United Kingdom with sculptors Dame Barbara Hepworth,[3] Denis Mitchell, and John Milne in St Ives; and Quinto Ghermandi in Verona, Italy.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".[1] Some of Booth's earliest works were inspired by the clearing of scrubland in Northland Region and his concern for how this affected the balance of nature.[4]

Style

Chris Booth works closely with the land, earth forms, and indigenous peoples of the region(s) where he creates his monumental sculptural art works. His way of working emphasises communication and exchange between indigenous and colonial cultures and the creation of meaningful environmental art works.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".[1]

A major current project is the SLS (Subterranean Living Sculpture) which Booth is developing in association with the Eden Project in Cornwall, UK. The major focus is to educate about the importance of lower plants and fungi for survival and the effect of climate change. Plans are underway to establish the SLS in New Zealand[5].Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Critical reception

Canadian author and curator John Grande commented, "What is more remarkable are the various forms of sculpture he has gone on to produce, entirely unique. While Booth's sculpture sometimes draws upon indigenous Maori and Aborigine characteristics, they remain unique, and capture aspects of topography, natural history, and landscape forms already extant in the places he works."[6]

Awards and honours

In 2011 Booth was awarded Honorary Fellow at Northtec Tai Tokerau Wānanga for 'outstanding and distinguished contribution to society'.[7] In 1982 Booth was the recipient of the Frances Hodgkins Fellowship at the University of Otago, NZ.[8]

Public sculptures and exhibitions

File:Chris Booth- Peacemaker, Wellington Botanic Gardens - 02 copy.png
Peacemaker, Wellington Botanic Garden
File:Wurrungwuri IMG 20211227 073223.jpg
Wurrungwuri, Royal Botanic Garden, Sydney
  • Waljin Beela , The Farmer Market River, Western Australia[9]
File:KMM Booth.jpg
Echo van de Veluwe, Kröller-Müller Museum

Print, film, and media

Booth was the subject of Woven Stone- a monograph published in 2007 by Random House, New Zealand.[24]

Publications include: 'Public Art and Ecology, International Public Artists' Discourse on Ecology', Shanghai Literature and Art Publishing House, China, 2011,[25] 'New Zealand Sculpture: A History[26]', Michael Dunn, 2002; 'Chris Booth – Sculpture in Europe, Australia & New Zealand[27]', Edward Lucie-Smith, Ken Scarlett and Gregory O'Brien, 2001; 'Chris Booth Sculpture', David Bateman 1993.[28]

Films include: 'When a Warrior Dies', 1992, Valhalla Productions, Wellington, NZ; Director: Michael Hardcastle;[29] 'Respecting the Earth', 2005, Director: Libby Hakaraia, Maori Television Kete Aronui series III; The Making of Wurrungwuri, 2013, Director: David Stalley, Brain in Hand Productions.[30]

Website

http://www.chrisbooth.co.nz/

Map of Sculptures by Chris Booth

References

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