Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
Installation view of John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan, New York, 2024
John Pule
September 12 – October 26, 2024
Opening: Thursday, September 12th, 6:00 - 8:00 PM
Venus Over Manhattan
39 Great Jones Street
New York, NY 10012
(New York, NY) – On September 12, Venus Over Manhattan will open the first US-based solo exhibition of artist and poet John Pule. From the small island nation of Niue in the South Pacific Ocean, Pule has risen to become one of the region’s most celebrated and important artists and is increasingly gaining notoriety across the world. His intricate paintings and drawings offer distinct meditations on the history, natural environs, and iconography of his home island and Polynesia more broadly. With John Pule, Venus Over Manhattan presents a unique opportunity for American audiences to experience the depth of Pule’s dynamic work, enhancing global awareness of his singular vision and practice. The exhibition will remain on view through October 26, at the gallery’s location at 39 Great Jones Street.
“We look forward to presenting the first solo exhibition of John Pule’s work in New York, and in the U.S. more broadly. As representation of and dialogues with Indigenous artists have increased over the past few years, we are excited to bring more global Indigenous voices into the conversation,” said Adam Lindemann, founder of Venus Over Manhattan. “John’s work is truly unique, both formally and conceptually, and will have strong relevance and resonance for many people. It’s our pleasure to further enhance knowledge of and engagement with his important practice.”
To further explore Pule’s dynamic work and especially his recent paintings featured in the forthcoming exhibition, Venus Over Manhattan will host a panel discussion with the artist and Dr. Maia Nuku, Curator for the Arts of Oceania at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, who has known Pule since the 1990s. More details regarding the date of the event will be shared in the coming weeks.
Pule was born in the village of Liku, immigrating to Aotearoa New Zealand at an early age. Pule remains deeply connected to his birthplace and now splits his time between Niue and Auckland. A self-taught artist, who first entered creative spheres through his extensive and award-winning body of poetry, Pule often draws on his own migration story and sense of identity to explore broader Niuean culture and mythologies. His art intertwines expressions of land, ocean, and people, both familiar and foreign, as well as symbols of colonization, displacement, and religion to create a visual topography that embraces personal and communal histories.
Pule’s visual vocabulary is also strongly informed by hiapo, a traditional Niuean decorative barkcloth. In the 19th century, hiapo were characterized by motifs inspired by native plant life and produced in fluid freehand directly on the cloth. With colonization, these works began to feature images of colonial influence, melding traditional Niuean cultural iconography with that of modern events. Pule’s own work often emphasizes representations of nature as well as references from across culture and time, bringing past and present together into singular compositions on canvas, barkcloth, and paper.
John Pule features new paintings from a series produced in the past year. Paintings such as Takeleaga; Hina; Haia; and Deep Niue Evening showcase Pule’s distinct engagement with both rich, saturated color and evocations of nature. The vibrant paintings compel the eye and draw the viewer into Pule’s fantastical abstract landscapes. Works like These hot evenings make dreaming difficult establish an entirely different visual encounter, capturing Pule’s incredible range. In this work, and others like it, symbols and gestural marks collide in an open expanse, flattening any specific sense of time, place, and narrative, and highlighting Pule’s contemporary sensibilities as he illuminates different historical touchpoints. Works from this series recently featured prominently in the 2024 Sydney Biennale.
While the influence of hiapo appears across Pule’s oeuvre, works such as Miomimioi (2023) and Nakai momohe a tautolu, Ka e faliu a tau-toli oti (c. 1994) offer the greatest visual continuity. Here, much like in many of the traditional barkcloth works, symbols, marks, and references are presented within a loose grid, encapsulating parts of an expansive story within a contained structure. The works are both elusive and evocative, framing ongoing histories and mythologies with a compositional continuum.
Together, the works on view offer a broad view into the depth and breadth of Pule’s practice, highlighting his unique ability to bring together different narrative threads and expressions in ways that both honor cultural traditions and create an utterly contemporary experience.
Pule’s paintings were featured in a publication accompanying Dr. Nuku’s exhibition, ATEA: Nature and Divinity in Polynesia (Nov. 2018 – Oct. 2019) at the Metropolitan Museum. In this publication, she writes that his paintings “embrace an atmosphere suggestive of ancient landscapes, a primordial Polynesia.” “Verdant and glossy,” Nuku writes, “these latest works seem to pulse with the energy of burgeoning life, from the thick undergrowth of the forest to the glassine sanctum of underwater rock pools… They speak eloquently to the flourishing life brough on by atea, the light: the brief but crucial spark, conceived as consciousness, that evolved into the layered canopies of the sky and drew the cosmos out of the darkness.”1
1. ‘ATEA: Nature and Divinity in Polynesia’, The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin (Winter 2019), p. 47.
ABOUT JOHN PULE
John Pule (b.1962, Liku, Niue) is a renowned artist and poet. His work has been presented extensively at prestigious institutions and events, including at the Queensland Art Gallery, 24th Biennale of Sydney, and Asia-Pacific Triennial. In 2011, the Auckland Art Gallery held a major survey of his work, highlighting his significant contributions to contemporary art, and in 2018, one of his large-scale, multi-panel paintings was featured in the monumental survey Oceania at the Royal Academy of Arts in London. Pule has been invited to important residency programs, including at the Romerapotheke Art Residency in Basel, Switzerland, and been honored with such awards as the Laureate Award given by Arts Foundation of New Zealand. Pule’s work is held in several public collections, including the Auckland Art Gallery, Te Papa Tongarewa (Museum of New Zealand), the National Gallery of Victoria, and the Queensland Art Gallery.
ABOUT VENUS OVER MANHATTAN
Venus Over Manhattan is dedicated to illuminating the work of a diverse range of historical and contemporary artists through dynamic rotating exhibitions and scholarly publications. Since it was founded by Adam Lindemann in 2012, the gallery has been responsible for revitalizing and establishing commercial, scholarly, and public interest for artists such as Peter Saul, Richard Mayhew, and Joan Brown. Venus Over Manhattan operates from two locations on Great Jones Street and its distinct exhibitions program, which has recently featured works by Claude Lawrence, Peter Saul, Richard Mayhew, Chéri Samba, Keiichi Tanaami, and Joan Brown, attracts a broad spectrum of collectors, curators, writers, and arts enthusiasts. As art world trends continue to shift, Venus Over Manhattan remains steadfast in its focus on the discovery of artists across generations, geographies, and cultures and to expanding the depth of artists celebrated across global institutions, by audiences, and within the art market.
For additional information about the exhibition and availability, please contact the gallery at info@venusovermanhattan.com
Press Contact
Alina Sumajin
PAVE Communications & Consulting
alina@paveconsult.com
+1 (646) 369-2050
John Pule, "Nakai momohe a tautolu, Ka e faliu a tautoli oti (We Shall Not All Sleep, But Shall All Be Changed)," c. 1994. Acrylic on canvas; Work: 69 1/2 x 63 1/4 in (176.5 x 160.7 cm) Framed: 71 x 64 3/4 in (180.3 x 164.5 cm)
John Pule, "Sun," 2012. Oil on canvas; Work: 79 1/2 x 72 1/2 in (201.9 x 184.2 cm) Framed: 81 x 74 in (205.1 x 188 cm)
John Pule, "Above Ground Underground," 2012. Oil, varnish, ink, enamel, oil stick, and polyurethane on canvas; Work: 78 3/4 x 78 3/4 in (200 x 200 cm) Framed: 80 3/4 x 80 3/4 in (205.1 x 205.1 cm).
John Pule, "Deep Niue Evening," 2023. Oil, varnish, ink, and enamel on canvas; Work: 59 7/8 x 59 7/8 in (152 x 152 cm) Framed: 61 7/8 x 61 7/8 in (157.2 x 157.2 cm).
John Pule, "Haia (Leave it at That)," 2023. Oil, varnish, ink, and enamel on canvas; Work: 78 3/4 x 78 3/4 in (200 x 200 cm) Framed: 80 3/4 x 80 3/4 in (205.1 x 205.1 cm).
John Pule, "Hina (White Moon)," 2023. Oil, varnish, ink, and enamel on canvas; Work: 39 3/4 x 39 3/4 in (101 x 101 cm) Framed: 41 3/4 x 41 3/4 in (106 x 106 cm).
John Pule, "Takeleaga," 2023. Oil, varnish, ink, and enamel on canvas; Work: 59 7/8 x 59 7/8 in (152 x 152 cm) Framed: 61 7/8 x 61 7/8 in (157.2 x 157.2 cm).
John Pule, "This way to reach the blue of the land," 2024. Oil, varnish, ink, and enamel on canvas; Work: 59 7/8 x 59 7/8 in (152 x 152 cm) Framed: 61 7/8 x 61 7/8 in (157.2 x 157.2 cm).
John Pule, "This way to reach the blue of the sky," 2024. Oil, varnish, ink, and enamel on canvas; Work: 59 7/8 x 59 7/8 in (152 x 152 cm) Framed: 61 7/8 x 61 7/8 in (157.2 x 157.2 cm).
John Pule, "Kua Kelokelo e Lāa Ke Tō / Ukutoka (The Sun Is About to Go Down / Dive Deep, Dive Down as Deep as Possible)," 2023. Ink, oil stick, and acrylic on paper; Work: 60 x 42 in (152 x 106.5 cm) Framed: 63 x 45 in (160 x 114.3 cm)
John Pule, "Mioimioi (Wandering Around)," 2023. Ink, oil stick, and acrylic on paper; Work: 60 x 42 in (152 x 106.5 cm) Framed: 63 x 45 in (160 x 114.3 cm)
John Pule, "Nakai Fai Mena Ke Lekua A Koe / Tukulagi / Tukumuitea / Maveheaga (I Promise to Never Bother You Ever Again)," 2023. Ink, oil stick, and acrylic on paper; Work: 60 x 42 in (152 x 106.5 cm) Framed: 63 x 45 in (160 x 114.3 cm)
John Pule, "These hot evenings make dreaming difficult," 2023. Ink, oil stick, and acrylic on paper; Work: 60 x 42 in (152 x 106.5 cm) Framed: 63 x 45 in (160 x 114.3 cm)
Completed from above in a process he likens to swimming, the New Zealand painter conjures an idyllic, spontaneous, and slightly Seussian canopy of trees reverberating with the sights and sounds near his seaside studio.
John Pule in conversation with Dr. Maia Nuku, John Gow, and Adam Lindemann
Artforum has named Venus Over Manhattan’s upcoming exhibition John Pule a "Must See."
New York may never sleep, but summer feels like nap time. At least in the art world. Culture shakes off the doldrums following Labor Day, roaring into fall, its busiest time of year.
A poet, printmaker, and painter celebrated across Oceania, 62-year-old Niuean artist John Pule is poised to make his U.S. debut this fall at Venus Over Manhattan.