Pete Wheeler

Pete Wheeler (born Geraldine, New Zealand, 1978) is an artist, currently living and working in Berlin, Germany.

Wheeler lived in Dunedin during the late 1990s and early 2000s, graduating with a BFA from the Otago Polytechnic's School of Fine Art in 2000. Since graduating he has held 16 solo shows in New Zealand, Australia, America and Europe.

Art

Wheeler's paintings forcefully display social responsibility in relation to political situations. Often using controversial and confrontational images, his work is both powerful and relevant. His images are both playful and aggressive, frequently using images taken from political propaganda and mass media as a basis for the venting of his frustration at the public acceptance of these manipulative political and marketing images at face value. At the same time he argues that the representation of an image is no other than marks on a surface.


Death, time and the shadow of history are recurring themes in Wheeler's art.[1] The artist habitually strips these to their bare essentials, often adding words or simple slogans, so as to both capture and mock their essence.

Wheeler's paintings have always displayed an introspection, and a sense of social responsibility in relation to political situations. Many of the more controversial and confrontational images used derive from the rise of Nazi Germany and recent Islamic fundamentalism. These works express a deliberate social conscience with an internationalist perception.

Exhibitions

Solo Shows

Wheeler's next exhibition will be as part of the three-man show "Gallery Mittwoch" at Kolektiv Berlin in April 2008

Art fairs

References

  1. The galleries: Intense leaps showcase further potential NZ Herald "he work is filled by a skull that suggests mortality, and the background comprises runs of paint to suggest tears and the passage of time. The skull is decorated in a variety of colours which are memories added to the past."
  2. "Don't Believe The Hype". Brooke Gifford Gallery. Retrieved 17 March 2015.
  3. "History Will be Kind to Me". Brooke Gifford Gallery. Retrieved 17 March 2015.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/8/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.