Māori Artists Weave Traditional Knowledge into Striking Art
Māori Artists Weave Traditional Knowledge into Striking Artworks at Wintec
With Wintec graduation ceremonies
taking place this month, it’s fitting that Wintec’s RAMP
Gallery is celebrating three Media Arts graduates who have
collaborated on a thought-provoking new
exhibition.
Margaret Aull, Zena Elliott and Aimee Ratana's new show, Ārai explores identity and the artists’ personal experiences as Māori studying in a westernised education system.
Ten years since graduating with Media Arts degrees from Wintec, the artists have collaborated on the themes and ideas that are behind the artworks on display at Ārai. The exquisite works in the exhibition are beautiful to experience but they also challenge us to think about larger ideas.
As an idea, Ārai speaks about barriers and obstructions. The exhibition examines the institutional frameworks that can, at times, become barriers to Māori ways of learning. In an attempt to shift these imbalances, Ārai provides opportunities for kōrero (discussion) and exchange to occur, giving the artists and participants the time and space to make new connections and understandings.
In Ārai, contemporary paintings with bold colours and striking imagery, along with poignant photographs seek attention and convey important messages. An installation that refers to traditional cultivation methods and a large graphic window work references Māori knowledge and learning. For these artists, weaving traditional knowledge and ways of being into contemporary artworks, encourages us all to cultivate a world of creative fullness and depth.
Ārai is open now, free to the public and can be viewed from 12.30-4pm from Tuesday to Friday until 5 April at RAMP Gallery on Collingwood Street in Hamilton.
Ārai artist talk –
Experience Ārai at a deeper level. Join us at RAMP
Gallery at a kōrero with the artists on Wednesday, 28
March from 1-2pm. If you would like to attend, please RSVP here.
About the
artists:
Margaret Aull - Tuwharetoa, Te Rarawa,
Fiji
Margaret Aull is based in Te Awamutu,
Aotearoa and has been an active agent in the community and
arts sector. She has exhibited work consistently for more
than a decade including solo and group shows in Aotearoa and
the Pacific. She has presented her research and work in
Hawaii, the United Kingdom and Fiji.
Margaret graduated
with a Bachelor of Media Arts from Wintec in 2007, before
completing a Masters of Fine Arts at Whitecliffe School of
Art and Design.
Zena Elliott - Ngāti Awa
Zena Elliott was born in Whakatāne, raised
in Te Teko and currently lives and works in
Hamilton.
Zena’s large-scale paintings channel both the
past and the present to provoke discussion surrounding
indigenous culture and identity in contemporary rural and
urban environments. Equally her works borrow from modes of
contemporary urban culture, referencing both rural and
contemporary society. Elliott pays homage to graffiti
culture and contemporary street murals through her use of
commercial paints, applied with elaborate stencils on
large-scale works. Her use of eye-catching, electric colours
alludes to the culture of advertising and signage and is an
attempt to magnify notions of indigenous culture and
identity.
Zena graduated with a Bachelor of Media Arts
(Honours) from Wintec before gaining her Master of Visual
Arts with Distinction, also from Wintec, in 2006.
Aimee Ratana – Tūhoe:
Aimee Ratana currently lives in Hamilton. Her works look to explicitly reinforce the principals of mana motuhake and rangatiratanga as aspirational future aims. Exploring notions of collective memory and presence and the importance of whakapapa (genealogy). They provide visual links to the past, present and future. Aimee contributed works to adorn Te Wharehou o Tūhoe, (the Tūhoe Tribal Building) which opened in 2014. She gained a Bachelor of Media Arts, from Wintec in 2003 and went on to complete a Masters in Māori Visual Arts at Massey University.
ENDS