Bruce Mahalski
Bruce Mahalski | |
---|---|
Born | Dunedin, New Zealand |
Nationality | New Zealander |
Known for | street art, illustration, sculpture |
Website | www |
Bruce Mahalski is a Dunedin artist, known for his illustration, street murals, and sculpture incorporating animal bones. He is founder and director of the Dunedin Museum of Natural Mystery, a private museum of natural history and ethnographic objects and curios.
Life
[edit]Mahalski was born in Dunedin, New Zealand, the only child of two academics; his father, Dr E. R. Nye, was a physician and researcher at Otago Medical School, and his mother Pauline Mahalski was a teacher of psychology.[1][2] Both were collectors of biological curiosities and ephemera, and Mahalski credits them with inspiring his own collecting. From the age of eight he collected shells, fossils, insects, crabs, and bones, and the skins of small animals.[1][3] As a teenager, Mahalski worked as an unofficial intern at the Otago Museum and dreamed of opening his own museum one day.[4]
Mahalski graduated with a science degree and worked for a time in fisheries research.[2]
Music
[edit]Mahalski fronted several bands in the 1980s. In 1983 with Mike Weston he formed Crystal Zoom!, and they were joined in 1984 by Robin Murphy (bass) and Barry Blackler (drums), both from Dunedin band The Idles.[5] Crystal Zoom! had two 1984 cassette releases, and in 1985 a single on the Flying Nun label called Dunedin Sound on 45, a medley of Dunedin bands set to the hand-clap disco beat well known from 1980s albums such as Hooked on Classics.[2] Dunedin musicians Martin Phillipps and David Kilgour played their own compositions in the medley.[5]
Mahalski and Weston moved to Waiheke Island, Auckland in 1985 and reformed Crystal Zoom! with a new rhythm section. They began to experiment with four-track recording, incorporating masks, photography, and slide shows in their live performances.[5] The band was less successful, and Mahalski moved back to Dunedin, reuniting with Robin Murphy and other former Idles to form Let's Get Naked. The first Let's Get Naked album, Something Like That (1987), was the third release of Dunedin non-profit label Rational Records.[6] It included the minor hit 'Funky Dunedin'.[5]
Art
[edit]When Crystal Zoom! moved from Dunedin to Auckland in 1985, Mahalski began drawing the strip cartoon Zak Water Buffalo, about a musician and music journalist, for BiFM magazine. The strips later appeared in Rip It Up and Otago University's Critic magazine, and Mahalski collected his cartoons in a self-published compilation called Biohazard in 1990.[7] Mahalski has been exhibiting and selling art since 1996, exhibiting screen-printing, sculpture, painting, and photography.[2] He is a lifelong pacifist and environmentalist, and both of these are themes in his art.[3]
"Sometimes I feel overwhelmed by my social conscience. I’m not talking about my love for humanity. It’s the world of nature that’s screaming in my ear."[1]
Bone art
[edit]Mahalski creates what he calls "textural bone art": assemblages of animal skulls and bones.[1] "I started seeing bones as like paint", he told film-maker Michael Hall.[8] His artworks occasionally include human bone, to make the point that humans are just another animal: "I don't accept that there's any spiritual distinction between the bone of a human and the bone of a sheep or a rat."[1][2] Skulls to Mahalski are special, connecting humans to the rest of nature and acting as a link to our biological past. "I see skulls and these objects as like spiritual telephones to other dimensions."[3] He is strongly influenced by collections of ethnological art and the works created by societies before Western contact.[3]
The raw materials for Mahalski's bone art are sourced from collecting trips on the beach and countryside, or found as roadkill.[2] His first bone art show, 2005's Full Spectrum Dominance, covered plastic machine guns with tiny bones to protest the War on Terror and the militarisation of children's toys.[2][9] By 2010 he was specialising in textural bone sculptures.[9][10]
In 2014 Mahalski collaborated with the Wellington luthier David Gilberd to build a functioning slide guitar completely covered with animal bones, including 35 skulls, using trimmed cow ribs as frets.[2][11]
Street art
[edit]Mahalski has created numerous street murals, often depicting animals or the marine environment. His 2012 mural Electric Soup in Orchard Place, London, depicts marine animals, including electric rays (referencing the nearby laboratory site of electromagnetism pioneer Michael Faraday).[12]
Mahalski has also been a keen sponsor of others' work, raising money to bring British street artists like Phelgm and Cityzenkane[13][14] to work and collaborate in New Zealand through his group Vivid Wellington.[15][16] Mahalski organised the creation of a mural of New Zealand artist Rita Angus in Bond St, Wellington, painted by street artist Askew One (Elliott O'Donnell). It was completed in January 2019.[17]
In 2019 Mahalski began a series of animal murals on Dunedin streets, referencing the specimens on display in Otago Museum's "Animal Attic". Animals depicted include badgers, sharks, an argonaut, a secretary bird, and a porcupine fish.[18]
Museum of Natural Mystery
[edit]See Dunedin Museum of Natural Mystery
After moving back to Dunedin in 2017, Mahalski converted the front of his Royal Terrace house into a private museum of "biological curiosities, ethnological art and unusual cultural artefacts".[19] He believes the roles of artist and collector cannot be separated and sees his entire collection as a work of art.[3]
Publications
[edit]- Hilton, Craig and Bruce Mahalski. (2018). Seeds of Life: The Bone Art of Bruce Mahalski. Rim Books. ISBN 9780994130679
- Mahalski, Bruce. (2005). New Zealand's golden days. Gilt Edge Publishing: Wellington. ISBN 1877404128
- Mahalski, Bruce. (2005). Pounamu. Gilt Edge Publishing: Wellington. ISBN 9781877404139
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e Hilton, Craig; Madden-Smith, Zoe (20 June 2018). "This Art Made From Skulls Will Make You Rethink Your Existence". Vice. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Smithies, Grant (6 July 2015). "Bruce Mahalski finds art in bones". Stuff. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
- ^ a b c d e O'Mannin, Charlie (12 July 2018). "Telephones to Another World: Dunedin's Bone Artist and Collector of the Strange and Mysterious". Critic. 15.
- ^ O'Connor, Ben (26 November 2018). "Skulls, relics and mummified felines at Dunedin's Museum of Natural Mystery". Newshub.
- ^ a b c d Burrows, Kate (16 June 2015). "Crystal Zoom!". AudioCulture.
- ^ Burrows, Kate (9 October 2018). "Rational Records". AudioCulture.
- ^ Mahalski, Bruce (11 December 2018). "Kiwi Rock Strips: an introduction". AudioCulture. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
- ^ The Bone Collector -The Bone Art of Bruce Mahalski, retrieved 18 August 2019
- ^ a b Read, Jame (1 February 2013). "Bruce Mahalski". Don't Panic UK. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
- ^ "Seeds of Life | Rim Books". Rim Books. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
- ^ Gill, Chris (24 February 2014). "It Might Get Weird: The Bone Guitar". Guitar World. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
- ^ Hunter, Garry (8 May 2012). "In The Belly of the River Thames". Brooklyn Street Art. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
- ^ "Cityzen Kane". Museums Wellington. Retrieved 18 August 2019.
- ^ Cityzenkane. Vivid Street Art Festival. Wellington. New Zealand 2017, retrieved 18 August 2019
- ^ Thomas, Rachel (19 February 2016). "Street artist Phlegm spruces up Wellington wall for Vivid festival". Stuff. Retrieved 18 August 2019.
- ^ Mahalski, Bruce (2 April 2017). "Cityzenkane at work in Wellington". Wellington.Scoop. Retrieved 18 August 2019.
- ^ Spicer, Antoinette (22 January 2019). "Rita Angus mural new addition to Wellington's Bond St". Stuff. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
- ^ Gibb, John (31 July 2019). "Museum's attic animals appear on Highgate". Otago Daily Times.
- ^ Rykers, Ellen (22 January 2019). "Why the Dunedin Museum of Natural Mystery is bound to attract the curious". North & South. Jan 2019.