Artist Talk with Kiran McKinnon
Kiran McKinnon discussed her practice and influence in an artist talk at NORTHART Gallery. Kiran McKinnon is an abstract painter who lives and works in Tāmaki Makaurau, who studied in London, UK and Auckland, NZ.
Her work engages with experience and memory, particularly of the sensations of the natural world. Her work ranges from large-scale immersive paintings and installations to smaller more intimately scaled works on watercolour paper. Her unique processes of painting in acrylic on raw canvas or linen involves spray, wash, wet on wet brushwork, and large quantities of water. The painting process weathers the canvas, mimicking in many ways the ephemeral processes the paintings invoke. Recent works have extended her use of water to include painting with sea water and rain water collected around Aotearoa.
"Water and weather are often at the centre of the places and experiences in the world that capture my attention, and thus find their way into my work. Rivers, lakes, the sea, rain, clouds, mist, all find reference in my work, and their echo in the methods I use to paint; misting, spraying and washing of water and paint across the canvas.
I am also fascinated by the interplay between the language and ideas of composition in classical music and painting. With RNZ Concert as my constant studio companion I listen not only to some beautiful music, but also to many interviews with musicians and composers. In these interviews I am often struck by the descriptions both give of their practice and works, and by how deeply those ideas resonate with my own thoughts on painting. Both ways of interpreting and translating sensations, images, or ideas from one form to another, or perhaps more particularly from sensation or perception, into form.”
Kiran is represented by {suite} Gallery, Auckland