Posts from the ‘South Auckland’ category

"Real Talk" by Tepora Malo

This is the design Leilani Kake and I have helped to develop with our excellent MIT Faculty of Creative Arts intern, Tepora Malo. Created at the Otara-based arts school, this design will be lovingly hand-printed by a team of volunteers using the Faculty’s commercial screen-printing facilities. Our aim is to produce a range of tote bags and t-shirts to support the #2girls1conference fundraising efforts to get Leilani and I to the 11th International Symposium of the Pacific Arts Association (PAA) in Canada this August.

Tepora is in the final year of her Bachelor of Creative Arts and working on the #2girls1conference fundraising campaign as part of a professional practice paper. We love her floral ‘island print’ mash-ups with leopard, zebra, text and cultural iconography and were keen to collaborate on a customised design for the campaign.

From our hashtags and conversations, stories and scribbles, Tepora came up with a design that we love a lot. Zebras, ‘island print’ and camouflage have been recurring themes in my art practice and Leilani has been planning a work using the idea of disruptive coloration for the past few years. Tepora was drawn to the term, REAL TALK, and that is exactly what we intend to take to the PAA!

Leilani and I will also have a stall at the GROUNDED: Festival of Sustainable Arts pop-up art market on Saturday 29 June at MIT Faculty of Creative Arts, 50 Lovegrove Crescent, Otara, South Auckland from 10am – 5pm. We’ll be selling t-shirts, totes and hand-made bits and pieces

 

When I came across Janet Lilo’s installation, Right of Way at Auckland’s ARTSPACE gallery, I had a day filled with experiences of the necessary paradigm shift related to the South / Central Auckland divide.

When you catch the bus from Papatoetoe to Karangahape Road, you traverse a socio-economic landscape from brown suburbia through industrial back roads, passing bigger, flasher homes in Penrose and Greenlane before Newmarket, with its window displays and disposable income. History and economics change before your eyes.

ARTSPACE has always been a problematic place for me. In the 2nd Auckland Triennial in 2004 I was involved in a petition about the photographer, Emily Mafile’o whose work depicted scenes of South Auckland people and spaces. The petition was aimed at the Triennial’s organisers inviting them to consider that for those working tirelessly to challenge stereotypes and negative perceptions of South Auckland, imagery such as Mafile’o’s did little to help the cause. It was an experience that gave me early exposure to issues of representation, art world power and influence.

These days I care less for the fiery philoso-fighting that I engaged with at every opportunity throughout my twenties. I am concerned and invested in the idea of cultural safety and empowerment rather than front-line combat.

Since her ground-breaking solo exhibition, Top 16 in 2007, I’ve always appreciated the ability for Janet Lilo’s work to translate across diverse audiences. She is the New Zealand artworld’s grassroots cultural darling – engaging value systems, histories and digital realities across the board.

Right of Way developed for ARTSPACE on the occasion of the 5th Auckland Triennial is fairly epic – in scale and in mana. Janet delivers, as she so often does. In the intimate moments created through her sound works, her digital vistas and real-life scale depictions of people and spaces, this is Janet’s ghetto aesthetic evolved; it’s refreshing and empowering.

I listened to one of Janet’s sound works on headphones for almost ten minutes, warmed by nostalgia and comforted by familiarity. It’s the sound of a muted house party; Samoan musician, Ria’s 2013 poly-hit, Winner mixed with classic house-party-old-school. In the flood of memories and lived experience this work evoked, I felt relief. In a private moment between me, an orange cone and a pair of headphones in a pictorial life-size environment that looks like where I live, the artworld felt right.

Hou Hanru’s lofty curatorial framework for the 5th Auckland Triennial is certainly dislocated in the Fresh Gallery Otara offering. If you were to live here is almost comical in an exhibition featuring not one artist who is familiar with what it is to actually live in South Auckland. In the case of ARTSPACE, Janet’s work effortlessly engages Hou Hanru’s wider ideas of transformation, locality and community; Janet is a mediator between worldviews and comfort zones. Right of Way is that new New Zealand art; post-identity, thoughtful, accessible – artistically egalitarian.

I suspect listening to Janet’s sound work was the first time an artwork shown in a central Auckland gallery has spoken so directly to my experience and worldview. ARTSPACE and Auckland’s Tautai Contemporary Pacific Arts Trust have recently joined forces to create an internship dedicated to engaging Pacific communities in a “meaningful and sustainable way”. It would be great to see ‘engagement’ not only in terms of education but also curatorial consideration. If Pacific communities were engaged AND reflected in the institution’s public programming, imagine the possibilities!

Listen to Nights on Radio New Zealand from 8.40pm on Wednesday 29 May for more discussion about the 5th Auckland Triennial’s presence in South Auckland as well as the representation of South Auckland on TV3’s drama series, Harry.

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Leilani Kake and I are due to launch our first collaborative fundraising initiative tomorrow. We’re aiming to raise around NZ$6000 to support our travel and participation in the 11th International Symposium of the Pacific Arts Association in Vancouver, Canada in August. Read more here.

Tomorrow, we launch our crowdfunding campaign via PledgeMe

We chose May 26 to mark the actual anniversary of Fresh Gallery Otara, the community arts facility I managed from 2006-2012 within my previous role of Pacific Arts Coordinator for Auckland Council (previously Manukau City Council). Leilani and I have spent the best part of the past decade working tirelessly to support and contribute to the Pacific arts and South Auckland creative sectors; for most of the time Fresh Gallery Otara was the epicenter of those efforts.

I left the role at Council in 2012 after significant organisational changes compromised my principles as well as what I felt was a level of innovation and service that the South Auckland arts community deserved. Since my departure, I’ve observed further changes that have shifted the Gallery away from its founding philosophies. Since 2006, Fresh Gallery Otara’s anniversary was marked with exhibitions and events that honoured the community, local artists and themes pertinent to Otara. This year there are no such celebrations; the Auckland Triennial‘s presence in Otara is a dislocated exhibition, culturally and geographically isolated from an arts programme that has little to no value for Pacific communities in South Auckland.

Further to that, currently the personnel situated at the public interface of the Gallery represent a heartbreaking level of ignorance for the nuances of arts promotion and discourse within the unique socio-cultural environment of Otara and South Auckland.

Whilst Leilani and I are now both embedded in other pursuits within the education sectors, we remember and acknowledge Fresh Gallery Otara’s role, mana and history, particularly at this time.

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I’m looking forward to local photojournalist Qiane Matata-Sipu‘s first solo exhibition opening this week at Mangere Arts Centre – Ngā Tohu o Uenuku in South Auckland. The exhibition honours Ihumatao, a semi-rural community situated on the edge of the Manukau harbour in between Auckland Airport’s industrial belt and the densely populated suburb of Mangere. Qiane has a vibrant photographic practice and an impressive portfolio of published writing; she is a busy creative entrepreneur working with a strong basis of love and respect for Māori and Pacific communities.

This exhibition is refreshing to see at Mangere Arts Centre, a locally funded arts facility that seems to struggle to deliver relevant visual arts programming. In what feels like a naturally aligned programming decision, I hope this exhibition signals a shift in awareness for the role of locally funded arts facilities in serving and responding to the communities they sit within.

Click here to find out more about Qiane Matata-Sipu

I couldn’t hold back the tears today at the farewell of Leisa Siteine from a massive 20 plus years of service to local government in South Auckland. Leisa was my manager for over six years; she hired me when I was 23, fresh out of art school, and wished me well when I left the role with Auckland Council not long after my 30th birthday.

I wanted to honour Leisa today, as everyone did. I wanted to say that for me, she was a model manager and an inspirational leader. I always felt everything I achieved in my role at Council was a direct result of strong, empowering leadership. She enabled me to see possibilities, opportunities and limitations – and exceed my own perception of my abilities. In different ways, friends and colleagues credited Leisa today for her kindness and her firmness, her nurturing nature and genuine passion and love for her job and the community she served.

Working in Leisa’s team was a safe space – I remember sobbing and being hugged on my darkest days and sharing highs and the satisfaction of seeing projects and events come together. I always respected her firm control over sometimes heated discussions and as local government in Auckland shifted to a unitary model, her bold leadership during what felt like an ethically challenging time.

An ex-colleague noted today that the tone of these acknowledgements felt like a eulogy, a sentiment that in part held me back from speaking openly about Leisa’s departure. It is simply an enormous loss for local government, for South Auckland’s arts infrastructure and service delivery and for the community at large. But fortunately, Auckland Council’s loss is someone else’s massive gain!

Thank you Leisa for teaching me to love my work, serve my community with integrity and fuel the creative fire!

My regular Cultural Ambassador update on Radio New Zealand Nights this month was a discussion on the experience of teaching a paper called Pacific Art Histories: An Eccentric View at Manukau Institute of Technology in Otara, South Auckland. I also discussed my perceptions of the new Fresh Gallery Otara look and its place in the Otara Town Centre.

Nights on Radio New Zealand (3 April 2013)[audio http://podcast.radionz.co.nz/ngts/ngts-20130403-2038-arts_-_pasifika-00.ogg ]

Fresh 2.0

Fresh Gallery Otara was established in May 2006 by Manukau City Council in partnership with the Otara community in South Auckland. As the manager and driver of Fresh, I produced 66 exhibitions from 2006-2012; I invested my blood, sweat and tears into the Gallery and loved my job but in June 2012, I left the role. The then Curatorial / Gallery Assistant, Nicole Lim took the reigns and has overseen the Gallery’s recent refurbishment and significant expansion.

This week, Fresh Gallery Otara re-opens as a new space under new leadership. I have unwavering support and loyalty to Nicole Lim and I can’t wait to see her first show in the new space.

Juan Castillo is a Chilean artist who produced a multifaceted work called Minimal-Baroque in 2006 as part of his residency at what was then Manukau School of Visual Arts. He collaborated with Otara artist, Leilani Kake to film a series of vox pops at Fresh Gallery Otara, asking members of the community and visitors to Fresh, “What is Art?”

The video is a historical and fascinating insight into community perceptions of the word ‘art’ – I’m so glad Nicole has chosen to re-show it.

Francis Falaniko, photographed by Vinesh KumaranVinesh Kumaran is a long-time collaborator and his input into Fresh Gallery Otara, SOUTH publication and the Pacific Arts Summits has been significant. His excellent series shot for the exhibition South Style (2009) is being re-shown and like Minimal-Baroque, exists as a historical record of South Auckland social history.

Fresh 2.0 is an exhibition that recognises the legacy of Fresh Gallery Otara, its significant relationships with Manukau Institute of Technology’s Faculty of Creative Arts (previously known as Manukau School of Visual Arts) and its enormous potential as a hub for creativity in the heart of grassroots South Auckland.

Great job, Nicole and go well, Fresh!

I invest about a fifth of my time into community projects, one of which is the Ōtāhuhu Arts and Culture Sub-Committee of the Ōtāhuhu Steering Group. I’ve been a member for the past two years and the Secretary for past nine months. The South Auckland suburb is a hotbed of arts and culture; the collective aims to raise awareness, connect creative and cultural practitioners and lobby the Council to establish a dedicated arts facility for the community.

We have a young blog: http://otahuhuartsandculture.com/
And an emerging following on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/OtahuhuArtsAndCulture

This Saturday we’re excited to be part of the Ōtāhuhu Family Fun Day at Fairburn Reserve. We were involved in the Christmas festivities and facilitated a recycled Christmas card making activity with local children.

On Saturday we’ll be making lolly and ribbon garlands and presenting a series of art demonstrations including Niuean weaving, traditional Indian Mehndi and aerosol painting!

Some great events happen in Ōtāhuhu, one of which is coming up this week. On Wednesday 20 March, the Ōtāhuhu Library is hosting a debate between students from McAuley High School and De La Salle College on, South Auckland: Is it where I want to be?

This promises to be an excellent event; it kicks off at 5.30pm. Congratulations to Ōtāhuhu Library for facilitating such an exciting discussion – I can’t wait!

For more information on Ōtāhuhu Arts and Culture join us on Facebook!

Source: http://www.flickr.com/people/Serentonin

South Auckland new media artist Tanu Gago is giving an artist talk at 1.30pm, Friday 22 March at Te Matariki Clendon Library, Manurewa, South Auckland.

He will be discussing his recent work and interests in the representation of Samoan masculinity. Tanu is a trained film maker who has been making gallery-based video and photography work since 2009. Since his first solo exhibition, YOU LOVE MY FRESH (2010), he has gone on to show at City Gallery Wellington, Fresh Gallery Otara, Auckland Art Gallery and the Harris Gallery at the University of La Verne, California. His 2011 series, Jerry the Fa’afafine is on permanent display at Mangere Art Centre – Ngā Tohu o Uenuku in South Auckland.

“Leo”, Jerry the Fa’afafine series (2010) by Tanu Gago with Vinesh Kumaran

I’m excited to see Tanu speaking about his work within a South Auckland context; I’m taking a group of students from MIT Faculty of Creative Arts and we’re all relieved we don’t have to go to Auckland for what promises to be a grounded and engaging discussion relevant to Pacific people and South Auckland.

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Fijian-Mãori artist Margaret Aull’s solo exhibition, Concealed Ancestors ends this Saturday 23 February at Papakura Art Gallery, South Auckland. A massively well-received exhibition, only three of the nine works on paper are unsold.

During the exhibition, Margaret presented an excellent artist talk on Saturday 9 February, and also managed to present some impressive new work in her end of year assessment exhibition at Whitecliffe College of Arts & Design where she is currently studying to complete a Master of Fine Arts.


Well done, Margaret!

It was a pleasure to work on this project alongside co-curator Nigel Borell. Margaret is a super organised and professional artist; helping her deliver this beautiful solo show was a joy!