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Thank you for helping us support artists, craftspeople, makers and designers in Aotearoa. Your order has been processed, you’ll receive an email with confirmation and order details. 

Thank you for helping us support artists, craftspeople, makers and designers in Aotearoa. Your order has been processed, you’ll receive an email with confirmation and order details. 

Past

How to make a home

In the 2022 reality TV series Instant Dream Home, unwitting contestants have their homes radically made over in just 12 hours. Alterations of nightmarish proportions, from house extensions to room remodelling, are completed alongside full cosmetic makeovers by a cast of hundreds of tradespeople. The 12-hour timeframe is bookended by a ferocity of homeware consumption. It begins with the en masse dumping of homeowner belongings, as furniture, appliances and domestic detritus are emptied from the house, destined for the bin. In the final minutes before the reveal, TVs are mounted and kitset furniture constructed in rapid fire, and workers form assembly lines to pump vast supplies of cushions, throws and decorative vessels into place.

How to make a home considers the advent of the modern interior – first emerging in the 19th century, as industrialisation brought with it a wave of mass-produced consumer goods. Today, interiors are fetishised through mass media and curated digital content as both an intimate space of family and retreat, walled off from the outside turmoil of daily life, and a staged and ever-changing environment designed to communicate status and identity.

Set within an exhibition design inspired by domestic architecture, How to make a home explores the small universe of home and the material politics of the objects and adornment we live with over time. Responses to dwelling by 14 artists, makers and designers build impressions of private life backdropped by the anxieties of contemporary consumerism and housing instability. 

How to make a home takes us from the rise of designer culture to the waste streams of fast interiors, positing that what makes a home is neither opulence or good taste. Rather, it is the persistence of things that inspire us to feel like we belong.

Featuring new and recent works by Megan Brady, Vita Cochran, Emile Drescher, War­wick Freeman, Annie Mackenzie, Karin Montgomery, Ben Pyne, Greg Quinn, Rick Rudd, Isaac Te Awa, Tyrone Te Waa, Toby Twiss, Wayne Youle and Louie Zalk-Neale, with exhibition design by Micheal McCabe. 

How to make a home is presented by Objectspace's Education Partner AUT School of Future Environments and is supported by Laminex.

How to make a home tableau featuring work by Isaac Te Awa, Karin Montgomery, Emile Drescher, Ben Pyne and Vita Cochran

(above) Installation views of How to make a home, 2024

Gregg Quinn, Welsh Stick Chair, 2021 and Annie Mackenzie, Persimmons, 2022

Ben Pyne, Fossick Lamp 1, 2024, Fired Place (new brick configuration), 2024, Brick Lamp, 2022, and Greg Quinn, Low-backed Windsor Chair, 2020

Warwick Freeman, Coil Bowl, 2016, Black/White Face Bookend, 2016, Lava Handles, 2015, (suspended) Wayne Youle, gum under the table and you can’t have it both ways, 2024, and Take a seat anywhere you like... just not there, 2023–2024

Louie Zalk-Neale, Ngai-kore-tua-mao (many climates), 2024, Rewa-taha (many soils), 2024, and Emile Drescher, Low Shelf, 2024

Rick Rudd, Teapot J-1444, 2013, Teapot J-1359, 2009, Teapot J-1361, 2010, Teapot J-1360, 2009, Teapot J-1354, 2008 and Emile Drescher, Rounded Bracket Wall Shelf, 2024

Megan Brady, Entangled and turning, we are river, 2023

Tyrone Te Waa, Whakamoemoe (enchant/ dream/ sleep/ combine/ marry/ join), 2024 in How to make a home, 14 Sep - 17 Nov 2024 at Objectspace, photographs by Sam Hartnett