Michael Reed

    
Michael Reed
CPIT Christchurch NZ
mreedo@gmail.com
www.xaviermeade.net


Biography

Michael Reed is an artist who works with a range of print media and teaches in Art & Design, Christchurch Polytechnic Institute of Technology, Christchurch, New Zealand.
Much of his work is aligned with the long history of printmaking as a vehicle for social and political comment. The versatility of print provides him with the opportunity to mix old and new media and materials in a variety of formats and scales, both traditional and non-traditional. This has resulted in an ongoing series of satirical medallions, works on paper, textiles and carpets.

Poster Presentation

Whakawhiti/Exchange
“Whakawhiti” or “exchange” is the basis of all communication. This is doubly important as New Zealand, a post-colonial and substantially immigrant nation, establishes and solidifies its identity as a South Pacific nation.

New Zealand, Aotearoa, is officially a bi-cultural and bi-lingual nation. The full recognition of Maori culture and how and what it contributes to the identity of our society and the nation, is a subject of on going debate and one that interests Meade and Reed.  The projects, Purakau/Myths and Legends and Ko Taku Kupu, Ko Tau/My Word is Yours, demonstrate this on going exchange between artists, writers and cultures.

Purakau/Myths and Legends
In 2009 Xavier Meade (NZ) and Prof Flor de Lis López Hernández (Cuba) invited twelve artists from Aotearoa, Cuba and Mexico to produce posters in response to the theme of ‘Purakau’ (a Maori term referring to myths, legends and “lessons for life”).
The artists activated a diverse range of indigenous myths and legends. The stories are deeply embedded in their cultures or origin, but the underlying themes resonate across cultures. The craftsmanship of the posters is exquisite. The Cuban contributors come from a long-standing tradition of handcrafted screen-printing, which has been maintained since the Cuban Revolution. All posters are made in their country of origin, through screen-print and lithographic processes.
This project follows in the footsteps of Xavier’s highly successful “Aotearoa Liberators” project, an exhibition of posters designed by NZ artists and screen-printed at the ICAIC in Havana, that found an audience in New Zealand, Mexico and Cuba.

Ko Taku Kupu, Ko Tau/My Word is Yours was the combined efforts of twelve Te Reo (Maori language) and thirty design students at the Christchurch Polytechnic Institute of Technology, producing a sequence of bi-lingual typographic posters, for a local literary festival, The Press Christchurch Writers’ Festival 2012.