Metamorphōsis
Artist: Estelle Ruijne
Opening Event: October 4, 2024
Metamorphōsis is a collection of paintings that explore the confusion, discomfort and uncertainty that often comes with growing up.
Her figures peel at their skin, their spines sprout wings, or they slowly emerge from unravelling cocoons, all shedding layers that reveal something entirely new has grown beneath the surface. In each of them, a metamorphosis has taken place. The unwitting characters in Ovid’s Metamorphosis experience dramatic transformations into plants, animals and other half-human creatures as a way of being given new life. In much the same way, Ruijne uses her art to visualise the invisible metamorphosis she and her friends have been undergoing.
Despite their often fantastical imagery, her expressive artworks are grounded by a sense of relatability. There is a permeable tension between the fear of and hope for change, of the discomfort in the familiar and the allure of the unfamiliar. Distress and hesitancy battle to overcome the yearning for something more that shines through the overarching turmoil. It is this feeling of pressure, of push and pull, that deeply marks the transitory period into adulthood. Metamorphōsis reminds all of us that change is inevitable, regardless of how hard we fight it.
Estelle Ruijne is an artist and poet who explores the transformative and fluid nature of the human experience. Currently a student at Howick College, she plans to pursue a Bachelor of Visual Art double majoring in Painting, Printmaking and Drawing, and Communication Design at AUT after completing her secondary studies. Estelle is committed to adapting and evolving these concepts through further exhibitions.
Metamorphōsis is her debut exhibition.
Click here to read the poetry accompaniment written by Estelle Ruijne.
Interested in learning more about the artist? Check out this special event below!
About The Wall
The Wall is our exhibition space dedicated to help give a leg up to emerging local artists still in high school or tertiary education by allowing them to go through the process of exhibition making without the stress and pressure that comes with the scale of the Malcolm Smith Gallery. The Wall also allows young artists more exposure than a traditional gallery space by being in the concourse area amongst all the action.