Art to encode the things you can’t say
Women's Art Initiative member Catherine Daniels discusses her metal sculpture works and their significance with WAI founder Dr Karen Seccombe. You can also watch this interview on Youtube.
Women's Art Initiative member Catherine Daniels discusses her metal sculpture works and their significance with WAI founder Dr Karen Seccombe. You can also watch this interview on Youtube.
Women's Art Initiative member Kelsey discusses her paintings and teddy bear installation, both part of "Standing In My Own Light - E tū ana i tōku ake marama", with WAI founder Dr Karen Seccombe. You can also watch this interview on Youtube.
We talk with Women's Art Initiative founder Dr Karen Seccombe about her work, a metal door inset with stained glass, on display as part of "Standing In My Own Light - E tū ana i tōku ake marama". You can also watch this interview on Youtube.
In the last of our interview series with students of Toioho ki Āpiti, Rosie Koko’s hand-stitched quilt brings together artistic elements from across the Pacific to create a a special celebration of her whānau.
In the third of our interviews with students of Toioho ki Āpiti, Ua’i Manusina weaves her family’s story into a set of Samoan tuiga.
This is the second in our series of interviews with Toioho ki Āpiti students. Aroha Millar’s jewellery-based work explores the way Christianity has colonised ways of thinking and ways of telling Māori customary stories.
This is the first in a series of interviews with students of Toioho ki Āpiti whose work makes up the Matatau 22 exhibition. Brook Konia’s two-part sculpture embodies principles of manaakitanga and the search for knowledge, while also exploring his own whakapapa.
Thousands of objects from the Te Manawa collections are now viewable online, thanks to an ongoing digitisation project.
Over the years Associate Professor Hone Morris has translated vast amounts of exhibition text into Te Reo Māori - there is truly an art to his work.