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Laureate Award
Humphrey Ikin
Humphrey Ikin
Furniture Maker
  • Humphrey Ikin
  • Biography
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Related links FHE Galleries
Milestones
  • 1957   
    Born in Lower Hutt, New Zealand
  • 1977   
    Bachelor of  Business Studies, Massey University
  • 1987   
    Solo Exhibition at Janne Land Gallery, Wellington
  • 1990   
    Solo Exhibition at Fisher Gallery, Auckland
  • 1991   
    Solo Exhibition at RKS Art, Auckland
  • 1994   
    Solo exhibition Room at the Dowse Art Museum;
    Solo Exhibition at RKS Art, Auckland
  • 1997   
    Solo exhibition Facing North at the Wellington City Gallery
  • 1998   
    Solo exhibition Facing North at the Auckland Museum;
    Listed as one of the top 40 designers in the world New York's I.D. Magazine
  • 2000   
    Solo Exhibition at FHE Galleries, Auckland
  • 2001   
    Awarded the John Britten Design Award, Designers Institute of NZ
  • 2002   
    Appointed Adjunct Professor of Furniture Design at Auckland UNITEC School of Design
  • 2003   
    Recipient - Arts Foundation of NZ Laureate Award
  • 2005
    Bachelor of Architecture (Hons) University of Auckland
  • Continues to undertake commissions for clients throughout New Zealand, and to exhibit on a regular basis at FHE Galleries, Auckland

Biography

Humphrey Ikin - Furniture Maker

Humphrey Ikin is a pioneer of the new Pacific minimalist design. His materials and inspirations are drawn from the local environment, but in their forms they link into the tradition of the international modernist aesthetic. Ikin's unique furniture pieces have widespread appeal, as they are undoubtedly works of art, but practical, comfortable and durable as well.
'Facing North' Exhibition - City Gallery, Wellington, 1997

Humphrey Ikin was born in Lower Hutt in 1957. He has a degree in Business Studies from Massey University, and an honours degree in Architecture from the University of Auckland. 

Finding that he was focusing more on the furniture for buildings than the structure itself he became a self-taught furniture designer and maker. Based in Auckland, he has now been working as a freelance furniture designer for over 30 years.

Humphrey has been at the forefront of New Zealand's design renaissance since the early 1980s. Dubbed a pioneer of the new Pacific design, he creates pieces that represent a successful blending of South Pacific symbolism and splendour with the functionalism of European modernism. In 1998 New York's I.D. Magazine listed him as one of the top forty designers in the world and featured his piece Red Stave Chair alongside work by Philippe Starck, Jasper Morrison and Antonio Citterio. In 2001 he won the prestigious John Britten Design Award, presented annually by the Designers' Institute of New Zealand.

What has set Humphrey's work apart is his on-going interest in the broader context of furniture, its history, its rituals and its future possibilities - expressed eloquently in the series of solo exhibitions he has held over two decades, most notably Room at the Dowse Art Museum (1994) and Facing North at the Wellington City Gallery (1997) and the Auckland Museum (1998). Facing North has been described as a seminal piece of work which gives proof to the assertion that the domestic object deserves critical attention to no lesser degree than the fine arts. 

Humphrey's work is held in both public and private collections in New Zealand and throughout the world. He taught part-time at UNITEC in Auckland in the 1990's, where, in 2002 he was appointed Adjunct Professor of Furniture Design at the School of Design.

In 2003 Humphrey received an Arts Foundation Laureate Award.  The Award is an investment in excellence across a range of art forms for an artist with prominence and outstanding potential for future growth.

Humphrey currently divides his time between furniture, sculpture and architecture projects from his base on the Kaipara Harbour, North Auckland.

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