Nathan Ingram & you, Reconfiguration, 2025

$1000 NZD

Powder coated aluminium – you choose the colour & finish

310mm x 400mm x 30mm

Nathan’s limited edition Reconfiguration in SCAPE Red are sold out and this colour is now unavailable.  Nathan’s iteration of the artwork creates an opportunity for you to purchase one in a colour of your choice.

You will visit Nathan’s favourite powdercoaters to view and choose from a vast selection of colours and special finishes, with Nathan there to guide you through the process. The result will be your very own bespoke Nathan Ingram artwork.

Please contact Ronelle (ronelle@scapepublicart.org.nz) to begin your creative journey.

This unique offer is available for a limited time.

National and International shipping fee additional. Please get in touch with Ronelle to arrange shipping before placing an order or if you wish to pay by invoice or bank transfer.

We will deliver in the Christchurch area.

*All online orders will incur a 2.5% credit card processing fee

Description

Be part of the creative process – a process of reconfiguration.

Artist Nathan Ingram says:

In my recent work, I have been interrogating the idea of authorship, dissolving the rigid boundary between artist and audience. Drawing on postmodern and deconstructive philosophies, I explore how meaning is not fixed by the artist’s intention alone but is co-created through engagement and interpretation.

My latest project, centred on the artwork Reconfiguration, explores this idea in a new way. Collectors are invited to choose from a curated range of finishes, from bold, vibrant hues to soft pastels and raw, textural metallics, shaping the final voice of the work.

But the collaboration doesn’t stop at the surface. Reconfiguration also offers three possible hanging points, allowing each collector to decide how the piece lives and transforms in their space. In this way, the artwork becomes a dynamic, evolving composition, one that continues to shift and reveal itself long after it leaves my studio.

By intervening in both the visual surface and the physical placement, collectors transform from passive viewers into active co-authors. Together, we collapse the traditional hierarchy of artist and audience, creating a shared narrative that remains fluid, participatory, and alive.