Roman Mitch & Shivam Sharma, Huri, 2020
Antec Torque Case, i5 8400k, EVGA GeForce RTX 2060, tech componentry
62 x 64.5 x 28.5 cm
Photo: Arekahānara

seen from United States

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Roman Mitch & Shivam Sharma, Huri, 2020
Antec Torque Case, i5 8400k, EVGA GeForce RTX 2060, tech componentry
62 x 64.5 x 28.5 cm
Photo: Arekahānara
Roman Mitch, Last Night, 2019
Festoon LED lights, transformer
Installation dimensions variable
Edition of 3, 1 AP
Photo: Arekahānara
He Pānui Anō ā Mātou ki a Koutou! Another announcement from all of us to all of you!
HĀTEPE Organised by Roman Mitch 4 July – 17 August 2019 Hātepe. v.i. Proceed in an orderly manner, follow in regular sequence. Algorithm. Marian Evans Dianne Rereina Potaka-Wade Penelope Sue Ursula Christel p.mule Ronan Lee Krystina Kaza Julian Hooper Cale Kaza Finley Lazurek Patrick Lundberg Te Maari Marcel Tautahi Ngaroma Natalia Tiffany Thornley Richard Shortland Cooper Mokopōpaki warmly invite you to join them on Thursday 4 July, from 6 – 8pm to celebrate the opening of HĀTEPE. Tea will be served with Steamed Matariki Pudding, pouring custard and spiced mid-winter cream.
Nau mai, Haere mai!
Ngā mihi nui ki a: Struan Hamilton, Ivan Anthony
Image: Dianne Rereina Potaka-Wade, HĀTEPE, 2019. Cartoon for screenprint and tāniko.
Red Teddy is a new book co-published by Mokopōpaki and Te Tuhi to accompany the exhibition by Roman Mitch at Te Tuhi in 2022. Red Teddy (2022) ka puta mai i Girls! Hit Your Hallelujah (2018) ki Mokopōpaki, Ākarana. Title: Red Teddy Creator: Roman Mitch, author; Mokopōpaki, author Contributor: Mokopōpaki, issuing body; Te Tuhi, issuing body; Sam Hartnett, photographer Series: Mokopōpaki (Series), 25 September–13 November 2022 Publisher: Auckland, New Zealand: Mokopōpaki and Te Tuhi ISSN: 2537-8783 Publication Date: December 2023 Format: 24 pages: colour illustrations; 30 cm Edition: 200 Notes: Spray painted insert by Roman Mitch; screenprinted cover made by Struan Hamilton and Greg Thomas More information and purchase here
Broadsheet (AUS)
Christina Barton, director of Te Pātaka Toi Adam Art Gallery at Victoria University of Wellington, 2023 talks programme curator and facilitator I am a curator and art historian, so I’m interested in art that is somehow adding to the discourse, engaging the issues, ideas and problems that artists are grappling with in this (or any) time and place. For me, art is a mode of thinking about the world, and I find beauty in that. For example, at the Aotearoa Art Fair in 2022 I kept returning to Roman Mitch’s small, gridded drawings that were really folded pieces of paper that had taken on the colour of the trouser pocket he kept them in for a certain number of working hours. The fact that the price of each drawing was based on the living wage turned these simple rubbings into eloquent materialisations of labour.
Rosie Herdman, Emotional Connection, a Good Investment or a Worthy Backstory – Why Should You Buy Art? (Sydney: Broadsheet, 27 February, 2023)
Roman Mitch Out of Time 16 – 20 November 2022 Aotearoa Art Fair Booth C3 The Cloud, 89 Quay Street, Auckland CBD VIP Preview & Opening Night Wednesday 16 November Art Party Friday 18 November General Entry Thursday 17 – Sunday 20 November More information
Image: Roman Mitch, Pocket Painting, 2008. Photo: Arekahānara
Ocula
Mokopōpaki: We wanted our booth to present a contrast. Out of Time is a solo exhibition of new and existing work by Roman Mitch. His pocket paintings are beautiful, performative, durational artworks from an ongoing series that began in 2007.
Some of Roman's new intermedia paintings are created using an original computer programme developed by the artist that reifies specific conceptual inputs.
Two highlights of Out of Time are Non Directional Field (2022) and Pocket Painting (2008).
We could consider the square to be a non-directional field. It implies a sense of equilibrium and ordering principle. However, we can transform this context in our minds very easily, and this mind movement represents the connection between architectural space and painting.
Sam Gaskin, Aotearoa Art Fair 2022: 7 Superlative Booths (Auckland: Ocula, 10 November, 2022)
EyeContact (NZ)
In this spectacular, cleverly organised exhibition by Mokopōpaki we have several artists sporadically participating alongside Roman Mitch, but Mitch’s own sensibility (a dense mix of Duchampian referencing, a love of the mechanical innards, workings and outer cases of HDD and SSD technology, and use of Māori concepts) absolutely dominates. The gallery space where many of these works were first exhibited was ludicrously narrow, so being presented here in Pakuranga achieves a major transformation.
The show, with about thirty items, is rich in Duchampian allusion, and fun because of that: Wedge of Chastity, Trap, The Large Glass, Bachelors and Sieves, Rotoreliefs, “Fresh Widow”, Why Not Sneeze Rose Sélavy?, Bicycle Wheel, Dust Breeding, Chocolate Grinder (No. 2), Faulty Landscape, Given: 1. The Waterfall, 2. The Illuminating Gas..., A Glider Containing a Water Mill in Neighbouring Metals, Nine Malic Moulds, Three Standard Stoppages, Duchamp Playing Chess with a Nude (Eve Babitz). There are dozens of references. They never seem to end.
Plus, besides Duchamp’s Wedges, Yllwbro’s row of doorstops might also refer to Man Ray’s Gift—the iron with a vertical line of nasty carpet tacks down its centre. Or Mitch’s Zero Gravitas, with its suspended Miss Crabb Rise dress and attracted electroplated clusters, is possibly also a reference to Marcel Broodthaers’ Maria, with its black coat and egg-covered bag.
My favourite work is Rangitauninihi’s The Discipline of Choosing, a large section of gridded steel fence languidly leaning against the wall with a saucy black slip flung over the top. It seems to be feeding on Mokopōpaki’s textual contribution interviewing the artist about her very focussed choice in clothing, while also drawing in “Fresh Widow,” and Why Not Sneeze Rose Sélavy?, the birdcage, marble and cuttlefish work.
Mitch and his Mokopōpaki colleagues have set up a considered, elegant show that looks amazing with its pieces of checkerboard flooring and impeccably positioned panel-stencil-sprayed computer side panels, fetishized dark glass and b/w aluminium cases, a row of hard drive platters, a row of door wedges, and clusters of clinging chrome-plated ball bearings, clips and magnets. Though very ordered, the whole thing reeks of constrained delirium.
Mitch’s own suspended curtain of LED lights appears to reference The Illuminating Gas and The Waterfall, while his sprayed on electroplated and abraded side panels present an overt link to Chocolate Grinder. While these days computers are regularly commented on as enabling compulsive onanistic practices, I’m not sure that is quite Mitch’s point—though it probably is. It looks like, as with Duchamp, an allegory about art (the bride) and her desiring ‘bachelor’ viewers.
The nature of art recursively perpetuating itself is another big speculative factor, computer case panels here often serving as stencilling templates for coating other computer case panels, that also possibly serve as stencilling…etc.
This sprawling (in parts self-conscious and fiddly) Te Tuhi show is a bit unwieldy, but because it is extremely rich in art historical, conceptual and visual interconnections—and dynamically an optical treat, despite being in thrall to Duchamp—it rewards exploration. If I were curator I wouldn’t have included Mitch’s Art Store Drawings, or the works by Penelope Sue or Marcel Tautahi and Ngaroma Natalia, but I can see formally why they are mixed in. And if I were a fluent speaker of Māori or an expert on the finer science underpinning electro-mechanical data storage, I might determine if there is an important dimension or trope to many of the work titles I have not hitherto grasped—perhaps cross-cultural puns.
Whatever the case, the exhibition’s infectious formal exuberance and distinctive conceptual intricacy make it a compelling experience for any curious visitor. A physically and mentally engaging installation.
John Hurrell, Roman Mitch at Te Tuhi (Auckland: EyeContact, 26 October, 2022)