Showing posts with label Dead Man's Block. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dead Man's Block. Show all posts

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Emma Smith: Dead Man’s Block (18/4/2026)


Emma Smith: Deadmans Block (2026)


Mōrena🐈‍⬛.

I’m excited to share details of my upcoming exhibition, Dead Man’s Block. This show is on for two hours only on April the 18th, 11-1pm. It’s at the New Lynn Community Centre in the Active Recreation Hall.

I’m very grateful to the indomitable Bronwyn Lloyd and Jack Ross for their accompanying texts and as ever the wonderful William Bardebes for fabrication, design and everything besides.

I hope if you live in Tāmaki you can make this show. 45 Totara Ave. There is loads of handy parking out the back and it’s right next to the train station and bus depot. Love to see you there!

- Emma Smith (22/3/26)

Tin Grew: Emma Smith (2011)










Han Shan Cave: Cold Mountain & friends


This is the poem I wrote for Emma's show:

Reading Cold Mountain
in interesting times


for Emma Smith

Cold Mountain: there’s no through trail – Gary Snyder I The little dog’s better he’s with the monks now Bronwyn assumed I’d remember she told me that the Buddhists walking across the States to raise awareness had sent off their dog to get his leg fixed he’s glad to be back he wagged his tail II This morning John sent me a link to a doco about Cold Mountain Han Shan a poet who lived 1000 years ago he may have been Taoist or Buddhist but was really just a crazy old man who scribbled poems on rocks as the old lady said he faded into the walls of his cave III In Hoffmann’s Mines of Falun a sailor gives up the sea after coming back from a voyage to find his mother dead the old man who lures him to work underground is a ghost or a demon or something like that they both end up stoned in veins of ore IV Cold Mountain this hermit who gave up on life to clamber up here had nothing to teach if you’ve nothing to learn there are statues of him and his buddies they’re ugly and red Red Pine laughed when he saw them the filmmaker asked him why because he would have laughed however he looked

[24-26/1/2026]


Rachel Heller: The Mines of Falun (Sweden)





Bianca Moorman: Aloka the Peace Dog & friends (Aiken Standard, 8/1/26)