‘When my daughter was born we spent a few days in the maternity ward, as you do. While there I was brought the usual congratulatory paraphernalia, flowers, baby things, lavender soap and a balloon. This balloon, with its long ribbon, hovered on the ceiling over the bed and crib constantly shifting its position in the stagnant air of our room.
Late on second night when my new born was finally asleep the balloon burst. Something inside me burst with it.
Over the course of the next few months, in the window of time when our new baby slept, I blew up hundreds of balloons and set about making photographs in my studio.
I watched these balloons shrivel and shrink, burst, and pucker. The balloons in Red Balloons and Knotted String held their shape for six months, as they slowly nestled into a weighty comfortable bunch against each other. Their colour intensifying as the air slowly leaked from their porous skins.
Though I have used balloons numerous time in other bodies of work, it is here in this experience that I really began to know them as what psychologists call a transitional object, keeping me company in the transitional space between my internal and external realities.
Working with balloons certainly has its moments. They don’t respond well to being placed in a position. Trying to shape a composition with them is a bit like trying to tie shoes laces with boxing gloves on.They also like to burst mid shot or frustratingly change shape over night.
Every time I went into the studio my internal emotional landscape was influenced by these transitional objects that are continuously in flux. I wrestled, nurtured and cursed these balloons until light composition and object fell together and an image before me started to reflect what I wanted to say and how I wanted to feel’
You can read Nina Seja’s review for Photoforum here: https://robertathornley.com/journal/review-my-head-on-your-heart/
Roberta Thornley is an award-winning artist and photographer.
Her cultural heritage, early and ongoing enchantment with photography and involvement in sport have given her a way of viewing the world that influences all aspects of her work. They form the foundation for her storytelling in various mediums and across genres.
Roberta Thornley was born in Auckland. She received a prime minister’s sports scholarship to attend the University of Auckland’s Elam School of Fine Arts. There she studied sculpture, painting and photography. She graduated in 2008.
She has exhibited in numerous exhibitions in both New Zealand and Australia and her work is held in private and public collections throughout New Zealand and internationally. She has won a number of prizes including the inaugural Auckland Festival of Photography annual commission, the Art50 trust funding grant and the Tylee Cottage artist residency, where she developed a body of work about a Whanganui teenage gymnast Millie recovering from injury at her seaside home in Castlecliff. In 2017 she was awarded the Marti Friedlander Prize for photography from the Arts Foundation.
Roberta has had a life-long interest in photography and an ongoing interest in the work of others. Her approach has been influenced by her relationships, a cultural heritage and education where the aesthetic experience was inherent and her life lived in sport.
In her practice she crosses genres and approaches – landscape, portraiture, and still life; from the staged to the incidental. She explores transformation and transition; states of change as well as evolution and development.
Her process is playful, exploring the shape and materiality of her subjects, building relationships, navigating landscapes. Yet play pauses when she takes a photograph and she is acutely aware of, and interested in, exploring this dialogue between play and the photographic act when she engages with her subjects.
Her work hovers at the leaping off point between still and moving image and she delicately occupies herself with the tension between narrative, time and the photographic image.
Aaron Lister, Curator, City Gallery Wellington
Roberta is working on a photobook that chronicles her time spent in Rwanda in 2015. She has a multidisciplinary research interest in aesthetics and is currently developing new commercial work. She lives in the Waikato with her 4-year-old daughter and partner.
Born 1985
Auckland, New Zealand
Education
BFA Elam School of Fine Arts, Auckland University 2007
Solo Exhibitions
Selected Works
Melanie Roger Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2023
Through the Nautical Twilight
Laree Payne Gallery, Hamilton New Zealand, 2022
My Head on your Heart
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland New Zealand, 2020
Maternity Leave March 2018 — March 2020
Survey show: Round and Round
Roberta Thornley works to date. The Pah Homestead, Auckland, New Zealand, 2018
A Serious Girl
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland New Zealand, 2018
A Serious Girl
Sarjeant Gallery, Whanganui New Zealand, 2017
Round and Round
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland New Zealand, 2015
O.E Travel 2014 — 2015
History in the Taking:Forty Years of PhotoForum
City Gallery, Wellington, New Zealand, 2015
I will meet you there
Tim Melville Gallery, Melbourne Art Fair, Australia, 2012
Anthem
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland New Zealand, 2011
Auckland Festival of Photography commission
Aotea Centre, Auckland New Zealand, 2011
Tomorrow
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland New Zealand, 2010
Spell
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland 2010
Spell
Stills Gallery, Sydney Australia, 2010
Idle
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland New Zealand, 2009
Pine
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland New Zealand, 2008
Selected Group Exhibitions
Peakes and Troughs
Conor Clark and Friends — Jonathan Smart Gallery 2023
Autonomous Bodies
The national portrait Gallery 16 September — 11 November 2021
On with the Show
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland New Zealand, 2020
Turn of a Century
Sarjeant Gallery 7 Sep 2019 — 9 Feb 2020
125: Celebrating women from the collection
Sarjeant Gallery Sep 15 — 17 Feb 2019
Auckland Art Fair
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2018
Aotearoa in Tokyo
Tokyo institute of Photography, Tokyo 2018
We Do This
Christchurch Art Gallery, Christchurch, New Zealand, 2019
In bright brief moments
Demo Gallery, Auckland , New Zealand, 2019
See what I can see: Discovering New Zealand photography
Suter Gallery, Nelson, New Zealand, 2017 (Nationally Toured exhibition)
Auckland Art Fair
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2017
Ten Years
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2017
The Blue Hour
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2016
Traits
Corban Estate Arts Centre, Auckland, New Zealand, 2016
Auckland Art Fair
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2016
Three Colours Red
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2015
Now you see it…
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2014
Boys don’t cry
Heather Straka and Roberta Thornley
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2014
Saloon des Ferari
Ferari Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2013
Three Colours Blue
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2013
Sea of Fog
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland New Zealand, 2008
The Nathan Club, Auckland, New Zealand, 2012
Five Years
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2012
Cruel & Tender
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2012
Now and Then
Te Manawa Museum, Palmerston North, New Zealand, 2012
Everyday Irregular
Sarjeant Gallery Te Whare o Rehua Whanganui, New Zealand, 2011
Auckland Art Fair
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2011
Game On
Hastings City Art Gallery, Hastings, New Zealand, 2011
Toy Story
The Dowse Art Museum, Lower Hutt, New Zealand, 2011
Another Universe
Calder & Lawson Gallery, University of Waikato, New Zealand, 2011
Deeper Water
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2011
Uncanny Valley
Christchurch Art Gallery, Christchurch, New Zealand, 2010
Paper Scissors Rock
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2010
Pretty Vacant
Dunedin Public Art Gallery, Dunedin, New Zealand, 2010
Melbourne Art Fair
Tim Melville Gallery, Melbourne, Australia, 2010
Black Market
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2009
Auckland Art Fair
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2009
Words&Pictures
Tim Melville Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2008
Aperitif
George Fraser Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2007
Portrait
George Fraser Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2006
Awards & Residencies
Mart Friedlander Award — The Arts Foundation, 2018
Tylee Cottage Residency, Whanganui, 2015
Art Five0 Trust Grant, 2013
Auckland Festival of Photography, inaugural commission, 2011
Collections
Christchurch Art Gallery Te Puna o Waiwhetu
Sarjeant Gallery Te Whare o Rehua Whanganui
Arts House Trust
Real Art Roadshow
Waikato Hospital Art Trust
Private collections New Zealand and Internationally
Books
My Head on your Heart — A petite booklet of text made to accompany the exhibition of the same name. Made with pages of delicate pink tissue. Edited by Jessica Kid and Designed by Joseph Salmon. 2020