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Resetting the Coordinates

An anthology of performance art in Aotearoa New Zealand

CHRISTOPHER BRADDOCK, IOANA GORDON-SMITH, LAYNE WAEREA, AND VICTORIA WYNNE-JONES
Format: Soft Cover
$65.00

A history of performance art

The first anthology/reader of performance art of Aotearoa New Zealand, Resetting the Coordinates offers a lively, 50-year critical survey of Aotearoa New Zealand’s globally unique performance art scene. 

From the post-object and performance art of the late 1960s to the rich vein of Māori and Pacific performance art from the early 1990s, its 18 chapters by researchers and practitioners is a major reference for art and performance communities of New Zealand, Australia and further afield. 

It discusses the influential work of Jim Allen, Phil Dadson, Peter Roche and Linda Buis, performance art initiatives in post-earthquake Christchurch and queer performance art, among many other topics. 

To look inside, click here.

‘Kudos to the editors for assembling an anthology equal parts provocative, fascinating and necessary’ — Theo Macdonald, North & South

‘It is a fascinating book with lots of performances which have been rarely written about, seemingly lost to history but which tell us much about the social, political and spiritual examinations and soundings which artists have made.’ – John Daly-Peoples, NZ Arts Review

Key Information

Category:
All books, Art and design, History
ISBN:
9781991016546
Publisher:
Massey University Press
Imprint:
Massey University Press
Published:
12/09/2024
Page Extent:
392
Format:
Soft Cover

About The Editors

Christopher Braddock

Christopher Braddock is an artist and writer and is professor of visual arts in the School of Art & Design, Auckland University of Technology.

Ioana Gordon-Smith

Ioana Gordon-Smith (New Zealand/Sāmoa) is an arts writer and curator.

Layne Waerea

Layne Waerea (Ngāti Wāhiao, Ngāti Kahungunu) is a Tāmaki Makaurau-based artist and educator whose practice involves carrying out performance art interventions that seek to question and challenge social and legal ambiguities in the public sphere.

Victoria Wynne-Jones

Victoria Wynne-Jones is an art historian and curator, and is an honorary research fellow in art history at the School of Humanities at the University of Auckland.

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