Monday, May 16, 2011

Rainbow Warriors

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Rainbow Warriors (2010)
Emil McAvoy
Cast aluminium, custom acrylic lacquer

Rainbow Warriors (2010) is the latest work in an ongoing series utilizing a custom modified
version of the infamous, and now ubiquitous, PR24 Riot Baton. The baton was first
introduced in to the New Zealand Police via the Red and Blue Squads in instances of
police brutality against civil rights protestors during the 1981 Springbok Rugby Tour. The
first work in McAvoy's series, Better Work Stories (He Patu! Ano) (2007), also makes
reference to the baton's appearance in the 1980's historic police rape trials and the
concurrent police recruitment campaign of recent focus in national media.

An edition of Better Work Stories was sold on the auction site TradeMe in reference to Red
Squad second-in-command Ross Meurant's controversial sale of his 'Minto Bar' on the
site; Meurant's baton being named after veteran human rights protestor and anti-
Springbok Tour figurehead John Minto. It sold to a South African collector for $NZ20,000.
McAvoy's online auction also operated as a discursive platform for issues or stories raised
by the work, where members of the public were able to discuss these directly with the
artist. Proceeds from the sale were donated to Rape Prevention Education.

Rainbow Warriors extends the conceptual terrain of Better Work Stories into a broader
critical engagement with New Zealand national identities. It is coded to resist simple
identifications, yet its playfully provocative signifiers may incite viewers to do so. The title
makes reference to New Zealand's history of international level environmental protest, and
was painted on the Twenty Fifth Anniversary of the bombing of the first Rainbow Warrior
vessel, another yardstick in our historical landscape. The rainbow colours also evoke an
association with the homosexual rights protest movement, of which the artist's mother was
a key New Zealand literary member in the 1980's when he was a child.

The four pairs of batons that evoke the forms of rugby goal posts, along with the hot rod
flamed phalluses reference the masculinist, heterosexually-oriented rugby and custom car
cultures. In contrast, the rainbow colours speak to the alleged homoeroticism of such
cultures, and spectrums of singularity which resist such easy reductions of identity. The
cross formation and fire iconography may evoke histories and treatments of homosexuality
within Christian churches, further connected to the Wallace Arts Centre's former history as
a religious building. Yet the cross symbol exceeds its particular association with
Christianity as an ancient representation of sacred unity and transcendence.

McAvoy's recent work excavates New Zealand's social and cultural histories for new
identifications and ways of making meaning in series which intersect conceptually and
materially. He has exhibited, screened and performed throughout New Zealand and is
represented in public and private collections.