|
Click on the thumbnails above to view larger images of the artworks.
|
Today, Matthew is an
artist and musician. He paints, carves and does tapestry, and his work can be
seen in . He’s also written his autobiography.
Up until 5 April 1991,
he was a teacher and a traveller, fluent in six languages: English, Mandarin,
French, Vietnamese, German and Spanish.
But that day, his life
changed utterly. Showing his students how to escape a fire, he jumped on to a
roof, went through a skylight and fell four-and-a half metres on to his head.
Unconscious for nearly three weeks, his “second” life started from the time he
opened his eyes. Everything before that moment was lost – and still eludes him
today.
“I didn’t know anyone
or anything: Mum, Dad, my eight brothers and sisters, friends, students, the six
languages I could speak,” he recalls.
Over the next three
years, he had to learn how to speak English again. “My life became very
different,” he says. “Fortunately – and surprisingly – I became good at
painting, carving and doing tapestries. Before the accident, I was too busy
doing other things to think about art but after the accident, that side of me
started coming out.”
Two different lives
And so, Matthew says,
he has been given the chance to have two different and interesting lives. “But
the reason for life is always the same – to live in a worthwhile and hopeful way
– no matter how many times it changes.”
It’s a story that has
captured the imagination of Tom Kelly, producer of The Gravy, an arts show
screening on TVNZ’s free-to-air digital Channel 6. Matthew is one of 30 New
Zealand artists who will be profiled on a new series of The Gravy, when
it goes to air in December 2008.
“We profile artists in
all kinds of creative disciplines – from music and painting to tattoos and
taxidermy,” Tom says. “With Matthew, I was particularly interested in the way
his work explores his previous and unremembered life, using photos and diaries,
and gives new meaning to his life today."
Fortunately, Matthew
kept diaries and took photos during his five years of overseas travel before the
accident. Without them, he wouldn’t know what his previous life had been like.
“I often travelled
alone and had to learn the language of wherever I was. For some reason, I seemed
to pick up languages easily,” he says. “Because of the accident, I lost all of
the languages but I can speak French and Mandarin again.”
At first, he says, he
got angry and frustrated because his life had changed so much. “It took me two
years to recognise the friendships I had and about five years from the accident
to feel that my life was coming back to me again.”
About 12 years ago,
friend Ted Downing introduced him to Pablos Art Studio in Wellington. Although
he has since moved to Levin, he still travels to Pablos and works there once a
week.
"Doing my own thing"
“When I first started
painting, I partly copied Rousseau and Picasso’s work,” Matthew recalls. “Then I
concentrated on doing my own thing. A lot of my paintings are about travel,
using the photos I took before the accident.
“But then I started
doing paintings of Wellington: the buildings, people on the harbour, animals –
mysterious things. It’s been marvellous because a lot of people like my
Wellington paintings.”
He also enjoys doing
tapestry work and says it’s a good way to pass the time when he’s travelling
somewhere. In September, he will travel first to Vietnam and then to
Switzerland.
“When I was in
Switzerland a couple of years ago, I did some paintings and tapestries for my
friends there. Andreas gave me a clarinet and so I taught myself how to play it.
This time, I know they’ll have a lot of paintings they’ll want me to do.
Hopefully, they’ll pay for it with lots of boxes of Swiss chocolate.”
written by Iona
McNaughton - Arts Access Aotearoa, 2008
EXHIBITIONS
My House Surrounded by a Thousand Suns: group
show curated by Jo Randerson. TheNewDowse (2008 )
Outsider Art Festival: group show curated by Sian Torrington and Fiona
Elwood. ROAR! gallery (14 Feb - 8 March 2008) |