Sanderson Studies is a curated exploration of art and wine, pairing boutique New Zealand wines with the hero works from Sanderson Contemporary’s exhibitions.
You can follow along by subscribing to receive two wines monthly or a seasonal six-bottle collection below.
Each release is a study in how the energy of the wine amplifies the solid form of each artist’s hero piece.
A monthly study in art and wine.
Each release features two small-batch wines, thoughtfully paired with the hero works from Sanderson Contemporary’s current exhibition. Chosen for how they echo mood, texture, structure and light, these wines are curated not just to match the artwork but to sit in conversation with it.
Available until November 2026.
Skip a month or cancel anytime.
2 NZ boutique wines
A note from the artists
5% discount off all shop wines
A seasonal study in art and wine.
Every three months, receive a curated bundle of six small-batch wines — each originally paired with the hero works from Sanderson Contemporary’s exhibitions from the three previous months.
Chosen for how they echo mood, texture, structure and light, these wines are selected not simply to match the artworks, but to sit in thoughtful conversation with them.
Available until November 2026.
Skip a shipment or cancel anytime.
Each quarterly release includes:
– 6 NZ boutique wines (three months, bundled)
– Notes from the exhibiting artists
– 5% off all wines in the shop
Mora x Jon Tootill
I’m exploring the dialogue between art and wine by pairing each artist’s hero piece with a wine that echoes its mood, energy, and emotion. The aim is to translate visual expression into taste, inviting viewers to experience the artwork through another sensory lens. Each match is intuitive and collaborative, celebrating both the artist’s vision and the craft of our boutique producers.
Each month, Boutique Connection sponsors Sanderson Contemporary Art’s exhibition openings.
This is a collaboration of wine and art pairing where we pair a handcrafted New Zealand wine with the artist’s hero piece. The project explores how taste and texture can echo a visual experience and perhaps even enhance it.
I’m exploring the non-verbal dialogue between art and wine and pairing each artist’s hero piece with a wine that echoes its mood, energy, and emotion.
The aim is to translate visual expression into taste, inviting viewers to experience the artwork through another sensory lens. Each match is intuitive and collaborative, celebrating both the artist’s vision and the craft of our boutique producers.
Jon Tootill
Jon Tootill’s work sits in the space between action and observation. His paintings are not about capturing a fixed moment, but about watching … how colour shifts, how light moves, how the eye travels across a surface. There’s a patience to his process, a willingness to sit with the work and let it evolve.
Rather than directing the viewer, Jon creates space for interpretation. His pieces feel alive, inviting you to slow down and notice how your own perception changes over time.
“Rooted in his countryside life over the last 15 years, Tootill traces how changing seasons shape perception, colour, and form.“ - Sanderson Contemporary Art Gallery
Harakeke
Harakeke (XIII) draws from the familiar form of flax, yet moves beyond representation into something more sensory. Vertical lines pull the eye upward, creating a sense of lift and quiet momentum.
At first glance, the colours feel vibrant and immediate — playful, even — but as you sit with the work, a more contemplative energy emerges. The interplay of light and tone creates subtle shifts, like watching colour breathe.
It’s a piece that unfolds slowly, balancing spontaneity with stillness — much like a thought that appears suddenly, then deepens the longer you hold it.
Mora - Brut NV
Mora Brut NV is a Methode Traditionelle sparkling wine from Central Otago, shaped as much by time as by intention. Fine bubbles rise steadily through the glass, creating a gentle vertical lift, while layers of citrus, brioche, and mineral texture build beneath.
What makes it such a natural pairing with Harakeke (XIII) is this shared sense of movement and evolution. The wine meets you with brightness and energy at first — much like the initial impact of the painting — before settling into something more textural and reflective.
The fine mousse mirrors the upward motion of the work, while the quiet complexity beneath speaks to the time spent observing, adjusting, and allowing something to fully reveal itself.
- Renée Dale
—
Jon Tootill
Harakeke
1 - 24 April 2026
Sanderson are pleased to present Harakeke by Jon Tootill - the artist’s latest exhibition marking his 75th year.
With a bold meditation on the seasonal colours of Aotearoa, this new body of work continues the artist’s intimate exploration of his immediate environment; mapping the colours of native flora and fauna that live outside his Karaka home and studio.
The focus of the show is the Harakeke (New Zealand Flax), a recurring subject for the artist since 2020, whose graphic forms and vibrant palettes anchor the exhibition’s dialogue between landscape, lineage, and abstraction.
Rooted in his countryside life over the last 15 years, Tootill traces how changing seasons shape perception, colour, and form. His artworks celebrate Aotearoa’s flora and fauna that colour the landscape at different times of year, translating botanical observations into a painterly language.
The artist's Ngāi Tahu heritage and whakapapa are inherent in these works - the exhibition continuing his integration of cultural motifs into a contemporary visual language:
__
Read more here.
VILAURA x Ray Haydon
I’m exploring the dialogue between art and wine by pairing each artist’s hero piece with a wine that echoes its mood, energy, and emotion. The aim is to translate visual expression into taste, inviting viewers to experience the artwork through another sensory lens. Each match is intuitive and collaborative, celebrating both the artist’s vision and the craft of our boutique producers.
Each month, Boutique Connection sponsors Sanderson Contemporary Art’s exhibition openings.
This is a collaboration of wine and art pairing where we pair a handcrafted New Zealand wine with the artist’s hero piece. The project explores how taste and texture can echo a visual experience and perhaps even enhance it.
I’m exploring the non-verbal dialogue between art and wine and pairing each artist’s hero piece with a wine that echoes its mood, energy, and emotion.
The aim is to translate visual expression into taste, inviting viewers to experience the artwork through another sensory lens. Each match is intuitive and collaborative, celebrating both the artist’s vision and the craft of our boutique producers.
Ray Haydon
Ray Haydon is a contemporary New Zealand artist whose work explores form, movement, and emotional energy through abstraction. His practice is intuitive and expressive, often inviting the viewer to experience feeling before meaning.
I met Ray over a year ago, but I had never seen his work out in the wild before! It wasn’t until 2025 that I noticed one of his elegant works appear on New Zealand’s Best Homes with Phil Spencer (Season 2, Episode 1). Featured in the Hahei House designed by Paul Clarke of Studio2, Ray’s sculpture feels almost inseparable from the timber architecture almost as though it belongs to the house itself. While I was disappointed that Phil didn’t pause to acknowledge the piece, I felt a quiet thrill in recognising it instantly as Ray’s work.
Spring
Spring has a sense of lift and release in the work and is a visual expression of freedom and optimism. Ray has spoken about his enthusiasm for green as a new colour when creating the piece, a sense of freshness.
The work feels alive… buoyant.
It doesn’t sit heavily in a space; instead, it draws the eye upward, suggesting growth, motion, and the promise of something new. When asked to translate the work into another sense, Ray, a man of few words, promptly described it like drinking champagne… effervescent.
VILAURA - Marlborough Rosé Extra Brut Rosé Méthode Traditionnelle2022
The wine paired with Spring was the VILAURA 2022 Marlborough Rosé, disgorged in Spring and perfect for this artwork.
VILAURA is an independent New Zealand sparkling house founded outside the constraints of corporate winemaking. In just a few years, they’ve made a significant impact onf the local wine scene, collecting gold medals, trophies, and multiple Wine of the Show awards.
What connects Spring and VILAURA Rosé isn’t just effervescence…it’s energy.
Both the artwork and the wine move upward. Both feel light yet intentional. Both are expressions of independence and optimism, freshness and freedom, made with care and conviction rather than excess.
Together, they speak the same language … one of renewal, lift, and quiet joy. A pairing that doesn’t try to impress, but instead invites you to pause, look up, and feel uplifted.
- Renée Dale
—
RAY HAYDON
Seventy Five
11th Nov - 7th Dec 2025
Sanderson are pleased to present the exhibition Seventy Five by Ray Haydon. Celebrating his seventy fifth year the exhibition explores the artist's dynamic and varied oeuvre spanning over two decades.
Haydon’s practice is celebrated for its deep engagement with the physical and conceptual properties of space. His works are held in many private collections worldwide, and have featured in major sculpture exhibitions in Aotearoa including NZ Sculpture OnShore, Shapeshifter Wellington, NZ Sculpture on the Gulf, and the Aotearoa Art Fair Sculpture Court. Haydon’s works have been featured in publications including Art News, Art New Zealand, ArtZone, The New Zealand Herald, Urbis, Denizen and Sothebys magazine.
Read more here.