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ARTS
PASIFIKA AWARDS 2005 HONOUR SIX ARTISTS |
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Courtesy – Creative New Zealand
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Six Pacific
artists, representing a range of artforms, were honoured at the Arts
Pasifika Awards 2005, presented by the Pacific Arts Committee of
Creative New Zealand at a special ceremony in Christchurch.
Chair of the Pacific Arts Committee Marilyn Kohlhase said the six
artists reflect the richness and diversity of Pacific arts in New
Zealand. “This year’s awards represent a wonderful mix of artists at
different stages of their careers and across a wide range of artforms,
both traditional and contemporary.
“However, what all of the artists share is a commitment to pursuing
artistic excellence, and producing work that speaks of their cultural
heritage and helps profile New Zealand internationally as a creative
Pacific nation.”
Ms Kohlhase acknowledged Anne and Bob Munro for their generosity in
sponsoring the inaugural Salamander Gallery Award for Emerging Pacific
Visual Artists and said that the Christchurch gallery has a long
history of exhibiting the work of emerging and established Pacific
artists.
“Nurturing emerging artists is a vital part of the Pacific Arts
Committee’s work and we’re delighted to be able to celebrate the
achievements of two talented young artists – one a sculptor, the other
a writer – alongside established and senior artists,” she said.
New Zealand. This was the first time they were presented in the South
Island.
The Arts Pasifika Awards 2005, the only awards in New Zealand aimed at
professional Pacific artists across all artforms, were presented to:
OPETAIA FOA’I:
Musician (Tokelau/Tuvalu/Samoa) of Laingholm, Auckland – the $7000
Senior Pacific Artists’ Award
Opetaia Foa’i has been performing and writing music for the past 20
years. Named in the New Zealand Listener as one of New Zealand’s finest
songwriters, he was playing the ukulele by the time he was six and the
guitar by the age of eight. In 1994, inspired by the music and stories
of Polynesia, he began writing in the Tokelauan language and formed the
band Te Vaka. His goal was to take Pacific music to the world and since
then, he has toured with Te Vaka and performed in 30 countries. |
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Creative New Zealand’s Art Pasifika Awards 2005 recipients:
Miria George, Opetaia Foa’i, Mafi Malanga XII, Ramonda Te
Maiharoa – Taleni, Maui ‘Ofamo’oni & John Ioane.
(Photo: Creative New Zealand)
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Art Pasifika Awards 2005: Mafi Malanga XIII and Marilyn Kolhase;
Maui ‘Ofamo’oni and son with Bob and Anne Munro; John Ioane with
Albert Refiti; group photo.
(Photo: Creative New Zealand)
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Art Pasifika Awards 2005: Miria George with Stephanie Oberg;
Opetaia Foa’i with Rev. Suamalie Iosefa; Ramoda Te Mahairoa –
Taleni with family; group photo.
(Photo: Creative New Zealand) |
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“Although I speak English, Samoan and Tuvaluan as well, I was
brought up in a Tokelauan community and this is the most comfortable
language for my songwriting,” says Foa’i, who arrived in New Zealand
in 1965 at the age of nine.
Foa’i has written and co-produced all of Te Vaka’s four albums. In
1996, he wrote and recorded Te Vaka, which was released in more than
80 countries to worldwide acclaim. The subsequent albums – Kia Mua
(1999), Nukukehe (2002), and Tutuki (2004) – have also gained world
attention and won awards. His song Samulai from the Tutuki album was
second in the world music category of this year’s International
Songwriters Competition in the United States.
MAFI MALANGA XIII:
Master artist (Mr ‘llati Taungākava, Tongan) of Avondale, Auckland –
the $5000 Pacific Heritage Arts Award
Mafi Malanga XIII has contributed to traditional Tongan arts and
culture, both in secondary schools and the wider Tongan community,
for more than 30 years. He is committed to teaching young Tongans
the rhythm, symmetry, harmony and beauty of their performing arts
and since 1991, he has led the Mt Roskill Grammar Tongan Performing
Arts Group to many successes at the annual ASB Bank Cultural
Festival in Auckland.
In the wider Tongan community, he has contributed to Tongan
performing arts as the King’s matāpule (master orator) and punake
(master artist). Born in Tatakamotonga, Mu’a, Tongatapu, Tonga in
1949, he comes from a family of artists. His father, Mafi Malanga
XII, was also a matāpule and punake, and he received strict training
for these offices from his father. It is rare for people to hold
both offices.
Mafi Malanga XIII came to New Zealand in 1974 and has continued to
be active in the ceremonial and artistic affairs of Tonga. He has
been matāpule on many occasions, including the royal visits by His
Majesty Tupou IV and his younger brother, his Royal Highness Prince
Tu’i Pelehake, in Auckland.
He plans to use the award to collect stories about the works of his
father, from both his family and other matāpule and punake.
JOHN IOANE:
Multi-media artist (Samoan) of Ponsonby, Auckland – the $5000
Pacific Innovation and Excellence Award
John Ioane is a multi-media artist, renowned not only for his
abilities as a painter and sculptor but also for his evocative
installation pieces and dynamic performances, including digital and
moving-image work.
Born in New Zealand in 1962, Ioane has worked consistently as a
visual artist for the past 15 years as well as teaching art in
secondary schools. Earlier this year, he gave up his teaching career
to concentrate fulltime on his art.
Through his artwork, Ioane constantly pushes boundaries as he
expresses issues about his culture and personal identity. His work
is held in significant public collections throughout New Zealand and
he is widely recognised as a leading contemporary New Zealand
artist. He is currently working on major public sculptural
commissions for both the Manukau City Council and Auckland City
Council.
His work is also attracting a growing international audience. His
installation, Poly Wants A Cracker, at the 2002 Pacific Notion
exhibition in Sydney debunked clichés and stereotypes of a Pacific
paradise. His Fale Sa installation and Moanamalosi performance
featured in the 2004 Paradise Now? exhibition at the Asia Society
Museum in New York.
MAUI ‘OFAMO’ONI:
Sculptor (Tongan) of Mangere, Auckland – the $3000 Salamander
Gallery Award for Emerging Pacific Visual Artists.
Maui ‘Ofamo’oni was a member of the design team, comprising
architects, artists and landscape architects, which designed the new
Visitors Centre at the Auckland Regional Botanic Gardens. The
project won the Built Environment category of the 2005 Creative
Places Awards.
Poised above the stone wall at the entranceway to the Visitors
Centre are three nikau sculptures, commissioned by the Auckland
Regional Council and created by ‘Ofamo’oni. The fronds are made from
translucent fibreglass with a copper base, and the sculptures
incorporate falling water and light. ‘Ofamo’oni’s first work, it
grew from his involvement in the design team.
Born in New Zealand in 1974, ‘Ofamo’oni has a Bachelor of Fine Arts
and a Diploma of Secondary Teaching, and is studying for a degree in
architecture. His goals are to complete his architecture studies and
eventually have his own business, involving sculpture, architecture
and design.
As well as studying for his architecture degree and helping to raise
three young children, he is also working towards his first solo
exhibition next year. He says the exhibition will focus on
obligation, identity and spirituality in relation to his mixed
Tongan/Palagi heritage. He plans to use the award money to buy
materials and tools to help him realise sculptural works for this
exhibition.
RAMONDA TE MAIHAROA-TALENI:
Opera singer (Samoan, Waitaha) of Invercargill – the $3000 Iosefa
Enari Memorial Award
Ramonda Te Maiharoa-Taleni will use the award to study singing in
London with a former teacher, Raymond Connell, who is based at the
Guildhall School of Music. She will be leaving for six weeks of
study immediately after the Pasifika Arts Awards.
Ramonda says she was “born singing”. Her formal training began with
piano lessons when she was a seven-year-old growing up in
Invercargill. At 14, she realised that music was a potential career
and considered becoming a concert pianist. But a move to
Christchurch and singing lessons when she was 19 sparked a change in
her career ambitions.
She has performed in many concerts and choirs, including the Sydney
Philharmonic Choir. She has also been placed in numerous
competitions and won the 1998 Lockwood Aria Competition in Rotorua
with Come Scoglio from Cosi Fan Tutti.
In 2004, she performed works by acclaimed New Zealand composer
Gillian Whitehead with the group Tuhonohono at the Jakarta
International Arts Summit. “Ramonda has an outstanding voice, backed
up by a real and practical musicianship,” Whitehead says. “She is at
a stage in her operatic career where she needs to expand her
horizons by spending some time in Europe.”
MIRIA GEORGE:
Writer (Rarotongan, Atiu – Cook Islands) of Wellington – the $3000
Emerging Pacific Artists’ Award.
Miria George, 25, is a playwright and poet, originally from Rotorua
but now based in Wellington. Her first play, Oho Ake, The Awakening,
was produced by Tawata Productions in October 2004 and went on to
win two Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards.
Miria’s second play, Lost, Again, will premiere in Wellington on 16
November 2005. It was selected for workshopping at the Pasifika
Playwrights’ Conference earlier this year and subsequently invited
to the international young playwrights’ conference, World Interplay,
in Townsville, Australia in July 2005, where Miria worked with some
of the world’s leading theatre practitioners. The play has also been
invited to Britain’s Pasifika Styles Festival in Cambridge in 2006.
Miria has several writing projects on the go. She is working on a
third play, Sunset Road, with the support of a grant from the
Pacific Arts Committee, and also reworking a short film screenplay.
Radio New Zealand has commissioned her to write a full-length drama
called Hikoi, hikoi and she is also writing episodes for the Radio
New Zealand serial, Hui Hopping.
Her first collection of poetry, The Wet Season, will be published by
Wai-te-ata Press later this year. She has also written a short film
screenplay.
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Copyright Event Polynesia Ltd.
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