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Richard Maloy

Tree Hut, 2015

Locally sourced second hand wood

Tree Hut is a site-specific artwork made over a weekend time frame working in response to its location and its island setting. Built near the remains of a tree house, Maloy constructed his, working with second-hand wood sourced locally from the Island. Located below the branches of a pohutukawa tree and the wild grass below, the work sits waiting for discovery and acts as a trigger for contemplative thought which in turn completes the work.

Maloy’s Tree Hut is the artist’s sixth in what has become an ongoing series, with each adding to the narrative and informing the next. His first tree hut was built from materials sourced from around Maloy’s family home and exhibitedat the Sue Crockford Gallery in 2004. The most recent hut was commissioned for Freedom Farmers at the Auckland Art Gallery in 2013/14, where Maloy made a large scale tree house working with left-over materials sourced from within the Gallery.

Richard Maloy

Over the past decade, Maloy has staged over ten solo shows and participated in over forty group exhibitions.

Some of the highlights include; Big Yellow, Brisbane Museum of Modern Art, Asia Paci c Triennial (2012); Toi Aoteraoa: Works from the Collection, Auckland Art Gallery (2011/12); Green Structure, SCAPE Biennial (2011); Inside Outside Upside Down, Ready to Roll, City Gallery, Wellington (2010); Raw Attempts, ARTSPACE, Auckland (2009/10); Remember New Zealand, Sao Paulo Bienniale, Brazil (2004). Maloy has works in the Auckland Art Gallery, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Chartwell Trust and Wallace Trust collections.

richardmaloy.net
Represented by Starkwhite Gallery, Auckland