Delegation to Festival of Pacific Arts 2012
Creative New Zealand media release
For immediate release,
14 March 2012
Creative New Zealand announces delegation to Festival of Pacific Arts 2012
Around 100 Māori and New Zealand-based Pacific artists will represent Aotearoa alongside 27 other Pacific nations at the 11th Festival of Pacific Arts to be held in Solomon Islands in July this year.
Considered the premier arts and culture event for the Pacific region, this is a government-to-government invitation with Te Waka Toi, the Māori Arts Board of Creative New Zealand, responsible for Aotearoa’s representation. Te Arikinui King Tūheitia will lead the delegation as traditional head.
Māori and Pasifika
voices
Invitations to the festival have been made to
indigenous peoples of the Pacific, and Māori have extended
their invitation to New Zealand-based Pacific
artists.
“As tangata whenua our story is unique. Part of that story is our relationship with all peoples of Te Moana Nui a Kiwa, so we are proud to collaborate with Pasifika artists. Together we will showcase the best of Māori and Pacific art from Aotearoa - both traditional and contemporary,” said Darrin Haimona, Chair of Te Waka Toi and formal leader of the delegation.
Pele Walker, Chair of the Pacific Arts Committee of Creative New Zealand said, "for New Zealand-based Pasifika artists, this is an important opportunity to reconnect with their origins while presenting a new perspective, shaped by their life in New Zealand."
Artists from North and South
Artists were
invited to submit expressions of interest to participate in
the delegation. Among those selected are weaver Emaraina
Small (Napier), poet Daren Kamali (Auckland), sculptors
Carla Ruka (Auckland) and Will Ngakuru (Northland), painter
Priscilla Cowie (North Canterbury), Pacific Underground
(Auckland) and Koile (Dunedin).
Travelling to the Solomon Islands is especially poignant for one artist. Steven Gwaliasi grew up on Malaita Island, but has lived in New Zealand for more than 20 years. Based in Hokitika, Steven is a sculptor, carver, jewellery maker and teacher. He combines Melanesian imagery and West Coast resources, with much of his work made from pounamu.
Husband and wife team Jeffrey Addison and Whaitaima Te Whare (Taupo) are part of a revival movement of a lesser known Māori artform, puppet theatre. They will present the story, Tāwhaki and the Māori Potatoes using karetao (carved marionettes). Also traditional puppeteers, musician Jerome Kavanagh (Taihape) and James Webster (Whitianga) will participate in the festival. James is celebrated for his work with taonga pūoro, tā moko and sculpture. He recently featured in the Māori Troilus and Cressida which will be performed in Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre in April.
The performing arts including kapa haka, contemporary dance and an evolution of Māori performance, developed 100 years ago called Haka Theatre, are strongly represented by reigning national kapa haka champion Te Mātārae i Orehu (Rotorua), leading contemporary dance company Atamira (Auckland) and multi-disciplinary performers, Kura Te Ua and Ngarino Watt (Auckland).
Niuean writer Dianna Fuemana (Auckland) will be joined by daughter Reid Elisaia and nephew Ali Foai to stage her play Birds. Dianna recently won a 2012 United States Screenwriting Internship Scholarship, securing a three month placement at Killer Films, New York.
In her early 70s, master weaver Misa Emma Keshsa (Dunedin) brings decades of experience. Taught to weave as a child in Samoa, Emma’s subsequent years of sharing knowledge with communities here and overseas, earned her the Queen's Service Medal in 2011.
A group of tohunga of Māori heritage artforms will also join the delegation, adding their expertise, reputation and mana to Aotearoa/New Zealand’s presence at the festival.
The overall group will travel with support from the Ministry of Defence who have donated the use of an RNZAF Boeing 757 for the journey to Honiara and back. Creative New Zealand has invested $500,000 to support Aotearoa New Zealand’s presence at the festival and will provide on the ground support staff in collaboration with the New Zealand High Commission in Honiara.
The 11th Festival of Pacific Arts runs from 1- 13 July 2012. Information about the artists in the delegation can be found on the Creative New Zealand website. Aotearoa New Zealand has sent a delegation to every festival since 1972.
ENDS
Confirmed artists are:
Atamira Māori
Contemporary Dance Theatre;
Mark Bonnington, Ngāti
Kahungunu Auckland
Bianca Hyslop, Te
Arawa Auckland
Kelly Nash, Ngāi Te
Rangi Auckland
Nancy Wijon, Ngāi
Tūhoe Auckland
Jack Gray, Ngāpuhi, Ngāti
Porou Auckland
Taiaroa Royal, Te Arawa, Ngāti
Raukawa, Kāi Tahu Auckland
Moss Patterson, Ngāti
Tūwharetoa Auckland
Vanda Karolczak
Auckland
Sarah Briggs Auckland
Te Mātārae i Orehu (team numbers to be confirmed) Rotorua
Pacific Underground;
Tanya Muagututi’a,
Samoa Auckland
Hemi
Lesatele¸Samoa Dunedin
Posenai Mavaenga,
Samoa Dunedin
Andrew Sione, Samoa
Christchurch
Toro Pikopiko Puppet Theatre;
Jeffrey
Addison, Kāi Tahu Taupo
Whaitaima Te Whare, Ngāti
Tūwharetoa Taupo
Koile;
Eshan Dean, Cook
Islands Dunedin
Hiliako Iaheto,
Tokelau Dunedin
Rangitakau Tekii, Aitiu,
Aitutaki Dunedin
Tao;
Jerome Kavanagh, Ngāti
Kahungunu, Ngāti Hauiti, Ngāti Maniapoto
Taihape
James Webster, Ngāti Mahuta, Ngāti Maniapoto,
Ngāti Hiakai Whitianga
Ngā Kaihanga
Uku;
Paerau Corneal, Te Ati Haunui a Paparangi, Ngāti
Tūwharetoa, Palmerston North
Davina Duke,
Ngāti Wai Whangarei
Hera Johns, Ngāti Kahu,
Ngāpuhi Auckland
Dorothy Waetford, Ngāti Wai,
Ngāti Hine, Ngāpuhi nui tonu Whangarei
Rhonda
Halliday, Ngāpuhi Northland
Amorangi Hikuroa,
Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Maniapoto Whangarei
Haka
Theatre;
Kura Te Ua, Te Aitanga a Mahaki, Te
Whakatōhea Auckland
Ngarino Watt, Waikato, Ngāti
Ranginui Auckland
“Birds”;
Dianna Fuemana,
Niue Auckland
Ali Foai,
Niue Auckland
Reid Elisaia,
Niue Auckland
Individual artists
Emma Kesha,
Samoa Dunedin
Carla Ruka, Ngā Puhi Ngāti
Whātua Auckland
Toni Huata, Ngāti Kahungunu,
Rongowhakaata Wellington
Daren Kamali,
Fiji Auckland
Steven Gwaliasi, Solomon
Islands Hokitika
William Ngakuru, Te Roroa, Te
Rarawa, Ngāpuhi Northland
Wendy Whitehead,
Ngāti Porou Napier
Priscilla Cowie, Ngā Puhi,
Ngāti Kahu, Ngāi Tahu North Canterbury
Emaraina
Small, Ngāti Kahungunu, Rangitāne
Napier
Visesio Siasau, Tonga Hamilton