Takarunga Hauraki: Nature and Place
Takarunga Hauraki: Nature and Place is an ecological photography exhibition showcasing and celebrating the beauty of te taioa and our unique community.
Takarunga Hauraki: Nature and Place is an ecological photography exhibition showcasing and celebrating the beauty of te taioa and our unique community.
The Weight of Things brings together Katie Robinson’s distinctive painting style with her unique form of storytelling.
This exhibition presents a series of body portraits that explore the beauty and truth of the ageing female form.
Faces, bodies, and strange creatures emerge from fabric in Sarah Cowie’s exhibition 'The Moon Looked at Me Funny.'
Spotlighting local architecture and community spaces, Anna invites us to reflect on all the memories and stories these places hold.
To close off a great year at DEPOT we're shining the spotlight on our creative and talented staff who work hard to deliver the engaging programmes we offer.
This grouping of paintings brings together three separate threads of work, all situated in the wild pine and native bush that populates the land near where Jean lives.
These works, created by young artists from migrant families, reflect their experiences of growing up between cultures, languages, and traditions.
Whare Ngaro is a pivotal exhibition that unapologetically addresses the kaupapa of infertility through a wahine Māori lens.
hā brings together ceramic works by Audrey Goggin and cyanotype prints by Anouska Wallis-Lewis. Both artists allow natural elements and their materials to determine organic forms, initiating conversations between the works and the environment they find themselves in.
(il)elible inkscription explores language as a palimpsest on bodies, transforming text across mobile, malleable surfaces – merging print and choreography through embodied scores.
Studio D3: dark space spans diverse practices in textiles, ceramics, jewellery, painting and printmaking.