Latest News

 
   

18 December, 2009

 

Our studio/gallery is open



After preparing all winter we are at last able to welcome visitors to our studio to buy from our collection of 20 images available as Fine Art Limited Edition prints. In most cases appointments to visit are booked in by the lodge or hotel here in Wanaka or Queenstown, either driving here themselves or brought by a local tour guides.


Booking is important as we are not always available – if the light is right we may well be out making sculptures. We are enjoying meeting collectors from all over the world very much.


For enquiries email philippa@martin-hill.com


(Limited Edition prints will soon be available from our website as well)



12 November, 2009

 

Green Museum selects Stone Circle for calendar cover


The 2010 Green Museum Environmental Art wall calendar features Stone Circle on the cover. The image is also featured for December. Each year environmental art projects are drawn from the global network of greenmuseum.org, a not-for-profit online museum. The calendar promotes the role of art in the creation of a more sustainable world culture.


30 July, 2009

 

Festival of Arts sculpture finds a new home


The Martin Hill sculpture What is Life commissioned to express the theme of Pouwhenua, or Markers on the Land, has found a permanent home in the foyer of the Lake Wanaka Centre. The work uses tensegrity – one of nature’s universal designs – and is a response to Hill’s concern with ecological sustainability.


28 July, 2009

 

Group exhibition at Gallery 33 Wanaka, New Zealand

In conjunction with the Pouwhenua project, Markers on the Land for the Wanaka Festival of Colour, Martin exhibited art prints of recent sculpture works alongside the works of Simon Kaan, Michael Tuffery and Areta Wilkinson who were the invited artists in the weeklong project.

11 May, 2009

 

Two more sculptures completed in Martin Hill’s Fine Line Project

Seven of the twelve sculptures on the Fine Line are now complete. We intend to make the remaining works during 2009 - 2010 to complete the project.


 

Fine Line sculpture in Iceland


In August 2008 Martin and I climbed to a site on the Wisshorn above Zermatt, Switzerland where we made a work from gathered rocks with the Matterhorn - one of the world’s most famous peaks - beyond.
A summer snowstorm transformed the landscape and sculpture overnight for a magical dawn image.
 

Fine Line sculpture in Switzerland


In August 2008 Martin and I climbed to a site on the Wisshorn above Zermatt, Switzerland where we made a work from gathered rocks with the Matterhorn - one of the world’s most famous peaks - beyond.
A summer snowstorm transformed the landscape and sculpture overnight for a magical dawn image.

10 May, 2009

 

Pouwhenua: Markers on the Land


A commissioned project for the Wanaka Festival of Colour, New Zealand May 2009

Martin was one of four artists invited to participate in a residency in Wanaka during the week of the festival with an introduction to the history of the land and its settlement by experts in Ngai Tahu history Matt Ellison and Brian Allingham. The other artists were Simon Kaan, Michael Tuffery and Areta Wilkinson.

Martin, being a resident in Wanaka was able to begin his research earlier.
Wanaka was named by Maori as a place of higher learning, so Martin decided to learn something new about nature’s design and incorporate it into his work for Markers on the Land. After much research he began work making sculptures using natural materials and nature’s universal construction principle known as tensegrity. This term was coined by Buckminster Fuller for the system discovered by Kenneth Snelson in which compression elements are held in dynamic balance solely by tension threads that connect them.
Donald E Ingber in a paper for Scientific American described tensegrity as “the architecture of life”. Other scientists see it as a model for sustainable economic and social systems.
In this sculpture for the Festival of Colour raupo stems were used, interconnected by linen threads. None of the stems touch each other and stress is distributed equally throughout the system making it resilient.

Previously he made a semi circular work titled Synergy and photographed it reflected in the lake to complete the circle. He then went on to make a completely circular sculpture that was eventually hung on 35 metre wires between two trees on the shores of Lake Wanaka with the mountains as a backdrop.

Entitled What is Life it was dedicated to the memory of his friend and climbing partner John Pawson who tragically fell to his death from the SW ridge of Mt Aspiring in New Zealand when he and Martin were climbing it together in November 2008.
 

Kosmos Journal features Martin Hill



Martin’s commissioned article” Learning to live by nature’s design” was published in the Canadian Fall/Winter issue 2008 of Kosmos Journal along with an eight page gallery of his sculpture photographs.

www.kosmosjournal.org
 

Wisdom Leaders CD

Driftwood and Ice, a sculpture by Martin Hill is published on the cover of Wisdom Leaders CD featuring global leaders talking about consciousness and sustainable change.

www.kosmosjournal.org/kjo/media/wisdom-leaders-cds.shtml
 

Photo Review Australia features Martin Hill


The summer 2008 issue of magazine Photo Review featured an illustrated article on Martin’s work and sustainable design philosophy. It was written by Steve Packer and entitled “Turning Circles.”
Link: www.photoreview.com.au/features/profiles/turning-circles.aspx

26 June, 2008

 

Martin Hill’s Stone Circle chosen for Yale conference report


For PDF of the report go to:
http://environment.yale.edu/newconsciousness













28 March, 2008

 

Martin Hill carbon neutral cards


Improving sustainable design standards in product manufacturing has been the main objective of this work, so we are pleased to announce a carbon neutral range of stationery products featuring four Martin Hill sculpture images has been published by Museums and Galleries UK for international markets.
Any unavoidable CO2 emissions created in the production and distribution of the EDEN range are assessed and offset to net zero in partnership with The CarbonNeutral Company. The paper is naturally scented and the cellobags are manufactured from cornstarch.
These benchmark products gives Martin great satisfaction and makes him hopeful that this is just the beginning of a transformation of all publishing to meet or exceed these higher standards.
For more information about the materials and processes go to www.beaconpress.co.uk
 

Martin Hill - sculpture making in Mt Aspiring National Park


We recently enjoyed four days of great weather and awe inspiring landscapes while hiking over the Cascade Saddle and down the Dart Valley in Mt Aspiring National Park in the South Island of New Zealand.
Starting from The Matukituki Valley there is a steep and exposed climb to a high alpine basin 1500m above with dramatic views of Mt Aspiring and the Dart Glacier.
Camping alone in this mountain wilderness was the highlight of the journey because we experienced the changing weather and light in the high mountains all around us.
Waking to clear skies and a pink dawn was an opportunity to make and photograph this simple sculpture with quartz stones on a mossy green tarn.

09 November, 2007

 


Earth to Earth is officially launched

The community in Wanaka turned out in their numbers to the launch of our book Earth to Earth. It was held at the Edgewater Resort at Lake Wanaka and for the occasion we made "Twig Circle" - a semi permanent work that is constructed on a steel frame so that in can remain in place. It was made using the prunings of the massive poplar trees that have naturalised in our landscape especially near the rivers and lakes. Though we usually prefer to work with native plants these trees have become part of Wanaka's beautiful landscape.

08 November, 2007

 
Martin signs books at the launch of Earth to Earth

16 October, 2007

 

Martin talks at DINZ’s Sustainable Design Conference

On October 5 Martin was invited to present a talk (and slide show) at the Designers Institute of New Zealand annual conference in Auckland. For the first time the design industry in New Zealand featured the importance of taking on sustainability as an integral part of design. The talk was presented as a cameo to a very appreciative audience.

01 October, 2007

 

Relaunch of the Martin Hill website

The new website you are looking at is the result of many constructive hours with our website designer Jon Clamp of MacStudio who in turn spent many more hours completely overhauling the site, especially in creating the new shop and gallery.

We’ve moved on from our very first website 10 years ago. Back then our customers had to download and print out an order form and posted it to us with their payment details. Perhaps you were one of them.

In 2005 Jon improved the site and added a shop that streamlined the process and provided a lot more information.

This new version triples the number of images to around 90, the navigation is improved and even a film is available to view. The shop uses PayPal, the safe way to pay without exposing your credit card details. Shopping is even simpler and by request we now offer a pack of pre-selected cards at a special price.

Any feedback or comments are welcome.

12 September, 2007

 

Martin Hill book launch date confirmed


Our book titled Earth to Earth is internationally published and will be launched on November 1st this year. Working on the book with our publisher PQ Blackwell has occupied us through 2006 and part of this year.

The book gathers together the very best sculpture images from about 12 years’ work, much of it created in New Zealand where we live but also on our travels all over the world. Included are many never before published works.

We will have signed copies of the book for sale in our online shop, so watch this space.

01 August, 2007

 

Digital Earth Conference

This conference is the first Digital Earth Summit focused specifically on sustainability and is convened by an international team of government, business, academic and citizen leaders. It is held in Auckland, New Zealand and focuses on how technology and the data it provides can best be applied to achieve sustainability in all sectors of society.

In relation to the most important issue facing humanity, that of long term survival, martin was invited to present a talk and slide show at the gala dinner illustrating the urgent need to redesign destructive industrial processes to,align with nature.

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