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• In the great wide panoply of human experience there exists, situated at one end of the spectrum, a strange fascination with the macabre, those dark brooding elements to do with doom, fate, melancholia, death and decay, a genre of art that bubbled up to the surface ironically during the age of reason and continued on down into the modern period.
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• Loosely termed ‘gothic’ it embraces everything from horror stories to hauntings and everything in between. Hitchcock was a master at conjuring these demons in film, but artists from the romantic period through to the present have dipped their brush into that dark inky world and danced with the devil of the ghoulish, the spooky and the downright unnerving.
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• Lunch: on your own. There are many restaurants and eateries in the vicinity of the Art Gallery.
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• Auckland City Art Gallery have engaged with that world in an exhibition called, GOTHIC RETURNS: FUSELI TO FOMINSON. • EarthDiverse is offering a combination talk on the Origins of the Gothic Narrative, followed by a guided tour of the exhibition, conducted by both Norman Franke, PhD and Peter Dornauf, MA.
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• Participants can choose to explore some artwork of the AAG's permanent collection, particularly the restored Brueghel the Younger painting ('The Village Fair') and can have some free time to explore other parts of the museum, Albert Park and the near-by shops such as Smith & Caughey's or Unity Books.