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- 468 - Arts NewsSun, 01 Dec 2024 - 02min
- 467 - Toi Te Mana: the bold and beautiful landmark book reframing Māori art
A 600-page new book that took 12 years to create is set to reframe the history of Māori art. Toi Te Mana (Auckland University Press) brings together work from Māori artists and museums from around the globe, ranging from Polynesia voyaging waka to contemporary Māori art, from body adornment and carving to street art and moving image.
Sun, 01 Dec 2024 - 29min - 466 - Dunedin artist Kari Morseth is weaving harakeke history back into the city's daily life.
Dunedin artist Kari Morseth is weaving harakeke history back into the city's daily life. The Rope/Walk community art project is centred around the South Dunedin's Rope Walk Building where Morseth has so far woven 68 metres of harakeke rope by hand with the help of many volunteers.
Sun, 01 Dec 2024 - 15min - 465 - Regional Wrap: Famed corrugated iron sculptor Jeff Thomson in Helensville
Jeff Thomson, one of Aotearoa’s senior professional sculptors, is best known for doing absolutely everything that’s possible with corrugated iron. His corrugated iron Holden sits in the Te Papa collection. He and his partner, artist Shona Cameron, live in a corrugated iron shed home/workshop in Helensville, out west of Tāmaki Mākaurau Auckland.
Sun, 01 Dec 2024 - 13min - 464 - Pacific Fashion Fusion Show continues while national show pauses: founder Nora Swann
The Pacific Fashion Fusion Show is preparing to run its annual catwalk through downtown Auckland's freshly designated Komititanga. Komititanga is the area that joins the end of Queen Street with the waterfront.
Sun, 01 Dec 2024 - 06min - 463 - The suppression of witches and plant based beliefs
The front of artist Ann Shelton's award-winning new book worm, root, wort.. & bane bears an image of a small silvered glass flask held in the Pitt Rivers Museum at Oxford University. The flask is said to contain a witch. The original owner reputedly warned that if you took off the wax seal from the flask, then there would be a 'peck o'trouble'. Shelton's artist book doesn't directly advocate for the seal to be broken, but does suggest it's high time we let a bigger 'genie' out of the bottle. That is, the historical and contemporary treatment of healers, gardeners, foragers and 'wise women' who have connected us to nature. Worm, root, wort & bane takes a wide-ranging look at cultural attitudes towards the witch, plants as well as the suppression of plant-based medicine and belief systems.
Sun, 01 Dec 2024 - 23min - 462 - Culinary and Cultural favourites with Peter GordonSun, 01 Dec 2024 - 15min
- 461 - Arts newsSun, 24 Nov 2024 - 03min
- 460 - The young generation beating new life into tapa cloth
Ngatu, siapo, aute, masi, tapa… just some of the names from across the Pacific for barkcloth which reflect the rich variety of bark used and working processes. . Tapa is having a moment in the art gallery - both as an extraordinarily vital traditional media in use across the Pacific and also as a discipline being re-energised by a new generation of makers in Aotearoa New Zealand. Artists are carrying forward distinct island cultural traditions, and speaking to their own sense of place in the world.
Sun, 24 Nov 2024 - 28min - 459 - 2024 Portage Ceramic Awards’ Premier Winner has a 'hard to pin down' quality
The Portage Ceramic Awards have long honoured the dynamic world of contemporary ceramics within Aotearoa New Zealand. The 2024 Premier Award winner and three Merit Award winners were announced at a ceremony on Thursday at Te Uru Gallery in Titirangi, where the work of 40 of the finalists is now being shown until February next year. This year's judge is internationally celebrated artist and West Auckland native, Kate Newby.
Sun, 24 Nov 2024 - 21min - 458 - Regional Wrap: Tairāwhiti artist Margaret Hansen portrays her aunts' lives of faith
This week on Regional Wrap we go to Gisborne where exhibition Wimples, crosses, and lepers Women of Influence has just opened at Tairāwhiti Museum. Margaret Hansen has also written a book by the same name about her two aunts Marie and Alice, and her own musings growing up Catholic.
Sun, 24 Nov 2024 - 07min - 457 - “We hope to offer hope” Bringing aspirational architecture to church - Award winner St Hilda’s
Churches big and small throughout Aotearoa New Zealand are vital spaces of culture and community but there are increasing challenges with heritage restoration and their relevance in today’s world. Around the country there are parishes operating from halls and community centres while precious traditional places of worship are boarded up. A recent renovation in Pōneke Wellington offers inspiration. On Friday a small Anglican church in the suburb of Island Bay won the Small Project category at the New Zealand Architecture Awards.
Sun, 24 Nov 2024 - 17min - 456 - Protest photographer records Hīkoi mō te Tiriti with his historic lens
For almost six decades photographer John Miller has been a protest photographer in Aotearoa New Zealand. From his first photographs of an anti-Vietnam War protest on Auckland’s Albert Street as a high school student in 1967, to Hīkoi mō te Tiriti earlier this week, John Miller (Ngāpuhi) has focused much of his work on the faces of dissent.
Sun, 24 Nov 2024 - 15min - 455 - Fast Favourites: Dame Robin White brings home the culture of Japan
In April 2024, one of our most treasured artists Dame Robin White travelled from her home in Masterton to Aomori north of Honshu in Japan, to be an artist in residence at the Aomori Contemporary Art Centre. A focus of her residency was the work of Aomori woodcut master Munakata Shiko who’s known for his community-orientated approach - something which aligns with White’s own as a painter and printmaker.
Sun, 24 Nov 2024 - 16min - 454 - The Musical Outlier: Diverse sounds from the electronic underground
The sheer diversity and invention of electronic music today in Aotearoa is evident in a list of sounds at the upcoming electronic sonic arts festival Outlier in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland. Curated by Grace Verweij and Tash van Schaardenburg, some are subgenres, while others, they admit, are made up. On the list: glitch, deconstructed club, emo electronics, ambient, gorge, modular + synthi, hyperpop, maximalist breaks, broken cassettes, mutant classical, ambisonics, techno-naturalism, taonga pūoro, drone, IDM, and noise.
Sun, 17 Nov 2024 - 26min - 453 - What does the arts make of the government’s draft arts strategy? Dr James Wenley and Dolina Wehipeihana
This month Manatū Taonga Ministry for Culture and Heritage released a draft for consultation of Amplify: A Creative and Cultural Strategy for New Zealand. It’s stated as a national strategy that outlines how the government will prioritise support for our creative and cultural sectors to 2030. Submissions are due 15 December.
Sun, 17 Nov 2024 - 18min - 452 - Minister Paul Goldsmith on the government’s new arts and culture strategy
The Ministry for Culture and Heritage has released Amplify: A Creative and Cultural Strategy for New Zealand. It’s a draft open for public consultation described as ‘action-oriented’ outlining how the government could support the creative sector through till 2030.
Sun, 17 Nov 2024 - 13min - 451 - Regional Wrap: Te Arawatanga with Raimona Inia in Rotorua
Raimona Inia’s focus with partner Nikora Mihinui has long been the perpetuation of their culture, with a strong focus on storytelling. A new series of six books they are producing in both Te Reo Māori and English, He hokinga mahara ki a ratou mā capture the proverbs of the elders of Te Arawa and share their origins. There are, Inia says, a total of just under 300 proverbs featured.
Sun, 17 Nov 2024 - 08min - 450 - Myths and Maidens: Documentary unpacks the stereotype of the Pasifika woman
We’re all familiar with the image of the Pacific woman on postcards and in tourism marketing; warm and welcoming, light-skinned, with a slim build and long wavy hair. But what happens for young women when that’s the only image perpetuated for generations?
Sun, 17 Nov 2024 - 22min - 449 - Making lace from muka: Rowan Panther in Te Tai Tokerau
In the far north, in Doubtless Bay, Te Tai Tokerau, Rowan Panther makes lace with fine strands of muka from the Harakeke flax bushes on her property. Bobbin lace to be precise, which is traditionally made with cotton. Panther’s material and the forms she makes with lace reflect the Pacific environment she lives in; taking a tradition forward.
Sun, 17 Nov 2024 - 12min - 448 - A Doll’s House Part 2: Iconic feminist Nora Helmer returns home
It was the door slam heard around the world, shocking audiences. Henrik Ibsen’s 1879 play A Doll’s House caused outrage with the central character, Nora Helmer, walking out on her family, leaving behind her children and husband in search of herself and a more fulfilling life.
Sun, 17 Nov 2024 - 13min - 447 - Fast Favourites with Tom Sainsbury
Actor, writer, comedian, director and social media star Tom Sainsbury is back with his friends and they’re Camping.
Sun, 17 Nov 2024 - 11min - 446 - Nō Konei - From here: Greg Donson on the collection and support of Aotearoa artists
As a curator at the Sarjeant Gallery Te Whare o Rehua since 2007, Greg Donson has been there for artists over a period of significant change for the gallery and the city. Now Senior Curator, he has spearheaded the redeveloped gallery’s opening series of exhibitions, curating new artists' projects and dynamic displays of works from the gallery’s rich collection, speaking to both the gallery and Whanganui’s history.
Sun, 10 Nov 2024 - 13min - 445 - Inspiring the youth of Whanganui: Māori educator Waiora Bailey Moore
Feeling the pull towards home, Waiora Bailey-Moore (Tupoho and Puketapu) returned home to Whanganui from Wellington two years ago.
Sun, 10 Nov 2024 - 10min - 444 - Michelle Excell: Bringing world class innovation and technology to Whanganui
Tech entrepreneur and founder of consulting company The Antipodean, Michelle Excell now proudly and happily calls Whanganui home.
Sun, 10 Nov 2024 - 23min - 443 - From McSweeney the gallery cat to Michael Laws: Martin Edmond’s biography of a gallery
The commissioned Te Whare o Rehua Sarjeant Gallery: A Whanganui biography by Edmond, published by Massey University Press, is a lively history. It reveals much about the politics and history of a small New Zealand provincial city; as its swings between conservatism and being one of the country’s most progressive. The political tussles the gallery finds itself embroiled in will strike a chord with many in other centres.
Sun, 10 Nov 2024 - 25min - 442 - Building community on the riverbank: Geoff Hipango at Te Ao Hou Marae
Geoff Hipango is the chairperson of Te Ao Hou and grew up here. Under his leadership the marae is gaining a reputation for innovation in thinking of the wellness of people across Māori arts, health, culture and the environment, with activity entwined with the river.
Sun, 10 Nov 2024 - 16min - 441 - Arts news: Whanganui reggae group NLC win best roots album at the Waiata music awards
Whanganui reggae fusion group NLC were winners earlier this year of best roots album at the Waiata music awards. Quincy Jones dies at the age of 91.
Sun, 10 Nov 2024 - 03min - 440 - The revitalisation of Drews Ave and urban contemporary spaces
The central arts and historic precinct of Drews Avenue in Whanganui has been rejuvenated in recent years. In 2020, the council received funding from Waka Kotahi NZTA as part of the ‘Streets for People’ initiative; to transform Drews Avenue.
Sun, 10 Nov 2024 - 23min - 439 - Cecelia Kumeroa: Bringing the art, design and stories of iwi to the city
Artist and designer Cecelia Kumeroa (Te Ātihaunui-a-Pārāngi) has been the Iwi Arts lead for the cultural design component of the new Te Whare o Rehua Sarjeant Gallery. The new extension to the gallery, Te Pātaka o Ta Te Atiwhai Archie John Taiaroa, tells a uniquely Whanganui story. The black granite cladding is etched with an Aramoana patterning and inlaid between the granite with metal ‘tioata’ or shards, sculptural elements which uniquely imitates the effect of light playing on water.
Sun, 10 Nov 2024 - 17min - 438 - Fast Favourites with musician and underground elevator operator Anthonie Tonnon
Much loved musician and Whanganui resident Anthonie Tonnon joins Culture 101’s Whanganui show as our Fast Favourites guest.
Sun, 10 Nov 2024 - 12min - 437 - 'Never give up': Realising the dream of Sarjeant Gallery as a House of Inspiration
Culture 101 is in Whanganui for the opening weekend of Te Whare o Rehua Sarjeant Gallery, speaking to innovators, and creative movers and shakers in this international UNESCO city of design. The gallery has been ‘newly reimagined’ with extension from architects Warren and Mahoney, in a codesign partnership with Whanganui iwi. A key figure in the gallery’s reopening is Sarjeant Gallery Trust chair Nicola Williams, who has spearheaded an impressive fundraising campaign.
Sun, 10 Nov 2024 - 10min - 436 - Arts News: Quasi on the move, live performance contributes $17.3 bil and a Yorkshire Pud halloween costume
Arts News: Quasi on the move, live performance contributes $17.3 billion and a Yorkshire Pud halloween costume
Sun, 03 Nov 2024 - 05min - 435 - The many artistic lives of musician David Long
Collaboration with artists across many disciplines and styles has long marked out the work of Pōneke Wellington musician David Long. David Long is perhaps still best known as a key musical partner of Don McGlashan in ‘90s band The Mutton Birds, and prior to that as part of experimental outfit Six Volts, who backed up the Front Lawn on their first recordings. But Long has also created the music for countless films including the Lord of the Rings trilogy, BBC series The Luminaries and recent Loren Taylor feature The Moon is Upside Down. Then there’s his long track record composing for contemporary dance, including writing many pieces for pre-eminent choreographer, the late Douglas Wright.
Sun, 03 Nov 2024 - 30min - 434 - Fearless Playwright, Producer and Laureate Victor Rodger thanks his mum
When asked by the Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi to describe the highlight of soon becoming a 2024 arts laureate, and winner of the Toi Kō Iriiri Queer Arts Award, playwright and producer Victor Rodger replied: “It means that I get to stand in front of an audience and thank my mother for essentially being the main reason I get to stand there in the first place.” Which is exactly what Rodger did, sharing the award at the Arts Foundation function late October with his “Mother Laureate”.
Sun, 03 Nov 2024 - 21min - 433 - Regional Wrap in the Gumboot CapitalSun, 03 Nov 2024 - 06min
- 432 - 'I didn’t even know what a canvas was' - From accountant to accidental artist
You could describe Iwen Yong as an accidental artist. Malaysian-born, he moved to New Zealand with his family at the age of six. First settling in Wellington, they moved to the Hutt Valley where he attended primary and high school.
Sun, 03 Nov 2024 - 17min - 431 - How To Art: Clown fruit mash-up theatre show hits the walls of Basement Theatre
Two bananas duct taped to the wall find themselves unexpectedly in the spotlight. In a clown, fruit mash-up of physical theatre, How To Art is hitting the walls of Basement Theatre in Auckland.
Sun, 03 Nov 2024 - 14min - 430 - The artist duo creating miniatures of our beloved backcountry huts
To say the artist duo Kemi Whitwell and Niko Leyden have an obsession with backcountry huts is no overstatement. It’s been the focus of their art and design for more than 12 years. The Waikato-based couple, who dub themselves Kemi & Niko, employ the skills of fine craft modelling, sustainable building and social connection to create miniatures of classic, and public programmes, for people to engage with them.
Sun, 03 Nov 2024 - 22min - 429 - Fast Favourites: Journalist and TV presenter Amanda Gillies
For more than two decades, award-winning journalist and presenter, Amanda Gillies has been gracing the screens in the living rooms of Kiwi homes.
Sun, 03 Nov 2024 - 13min - 428 - Mother, fighter, photographer Tish Murtha: Her powerful images of youth in Thatcher’s Britain
Extraordinary photographs of youth in late 70’s early ‘80s Newcastle in the UK have in recent years started to come fully into the light, thanks to the photographer’s daughter. Work that offers an interesting counter to debate over the ethics of documentary photography around the work of artists like Ans Westra here in Aotearoa New Zealand. Nicknamed at one time ‘The Demon Snapper’ for her controversial advocacy, working class photographer Tish Murtha powerfully captured the impact of Thatcherism on the north east of England.
Sun, 27 Oct 2024 - 28min - 427 - Fresh Ink: The Dynamic New Wave of Tattoo Artists
Tucked away in the armpit of Cuba Street is Buttercat Tattoo, a collective of six artists dedicated to elevating each other's work and exploring a broad range of tattoo designs and techniques. Artists Rose Hu and Tim Gadia speak to Culture 101 about how they carved out unique careers that satisfy their artistic passions.
Sun, 27 Oct 2024 - 14min - 426 - ‘I’m writing you a poem about art’ - A poem by Tusiata AviaSun, 27 Oct 2024 - 08min
- 425 - Regional Wrap: On the Kāpiti Arts Trail with mayor Janet Holborow
The popular Kāpiti Arts Trail is on over the first two weekends of November, boasting over 300 artists opening up their studios and shared spaces, or exhibiting in 13 galleries from Ōtaki to Paekākāriki. Since 2001 the programme has helped put Kāpiti on the map. A keen supporter is the district’s mayor Janet Holborow, who joins us for this week's Regional Wrap.
Sun, 27 Oct 2024 - 09min - 424 - Public fountains and pools: A thing of our modern past?
From the Cuba Street bucket fountain to the fake lake at Te Papa and the famous 1958 James Turkington mural at the Parnell Baths, artist duo Bena Jackson and Max Fleury have an interest in our relationship to public water features.
Sun, 27 Oct 2024 - 15min - 423 - Colonial controversy around bike lanes: Aotearoa’s bicycle pioneers
Anyone who thinks controversy around cycle lanes is anything new, should pick up a copy of Michael Toohey’s just published account of the bicycle’s beginnings in Aotearoa New Zealand, The Cycling Pioneers.
Sun, 27 Oct 2024 - 14min - 422 - Matthew Sunderland: The NZ screen actor who plays life's strays
Matthew Sunderland is an Aotearoa New Zealand screen actor whose characters often turn up unexpectedly, in unexpected places. Ever since playing gunman David Gray - the man who killed 13 residents in the small township of Aramoana - in acclaimed 2006 film Out of the Blue, Sunderland has been looked to play outliers and, frankly, disturbed individuals.
Sun, 27 Oct 2024 - 15min - 421 - Fast Favourites: Fringe Festival Director, Musician and Actress Vanessa Stacey
This weeks Fast Favourites guest is Wellington-based producer, writer, and director Vanessa Stacey is a jack of all creative trades. With more than two decades of experience, her extensive portfolio spans theatre, film, music, and television.
Sun, 27 Oct 2024 - 08min - 420 - Theatre director Ben Crowder: From Isle of Wight island life to boarding school in Christchurch
Theatre director Ben Crowder had never really watched Peter Pan. He’d seen a London production as a child, and admits he was mostly confused, and the 1991 film Hook which stars Robyn Williams and Dustin Hoffman.
Sun, 20 Oct 2024 - 21min - 419 - Regional Wrap: Matamata with Mia Smith
Each week, Culture 101 puts the spotlight on a different part of Aotearoa and this week we’re in the town of Matamata.
Sun, 20 Oct 2024 - 06min - 418 - 6-hour interactive photoshoot replaces camera shutter with bullet sounds
For six hours, artist and photographer Elisabeth Denis photographed a model in a durational performance piece. Instead of camera clicks or shutter sounds, these were replaced with the sound of bullets firing from a gun. Sharp, abrasive and uncomfortable.
Sun, 20 Oct 2024 - 16min - 417 - Laguna Beach, skinny jeans and dial-up internet: Teen comedy n00b a love letter to the early noughties
The year is 2005. Tom Cruise jumps on Oprah Winfrey’s couch, Mariah Carey has made a resurgence, skinny jeans and Thin Lizzy are all the rage and dial-up internet is in full swing.
Sun, 20 Oct 2024 - 18min - 416 - NZ’s Pinball wizard: Hamish Guthrey bringing new tech to the arcade
The latest machine to arrive at arcade Ye Olde Pinball Shoppe in Pōneke Wellington is Pulp Fiction. It’s packed with the classic soundtrack and audio clips, together with table sculptures of your favourite characters and a half eaten hamburger - the iconic Royale with cheese.
Sun, 20 Oct 2024 - 13min - 415 - Fast Favourites: The Aussie Office’s Edith Poor
It’s one of the most popular shows of the 21st century and now, another iteration is taking place downunder. The Office is set in Australia with the first female boss - Hannah Howard, at a Sydney-based packaging company, played by actor and comedian Felicity Ward.
Sun, 20 Oct 2024 - 12min - 414 - “The internet is radically unstable” The mindblowing worlds of Youtube video game essayist Jacob GellerSun, 13 Oct 2024 - 52min
- 413 - Regional Wrap: Rakiura Stewart Island with Gwen Neave
Rakiura, with a population of just 450, is the furthest south we have ventured for RNZ Culture 101’s Regional Wrap.
Sun, 13 Oct 2024 - 07min - 412 - Akira Kurosawa: The Japanese filmmaker Spielberg calls ‘the pictorial Shakespeare of our time’
This spring, nine of Akira Kurosawa’s most beloved films are returning to Aotearoa's cinemas, including a brand-new digital restoration of Seven Samurai.
Sun, 13 Oct 2024 - 18min - 411 - Dressing up to bare all: Freya Finch’s slow burlesque
A Slow Burlesque is a work that has been on Freya Finch's mind for almost a decade. Freya's interest in burlesque first started at John Bolton Theatre School. A four-month intensive course in Melbourne, Finch describes it as a boot camp-like experience, performing newly devised work every week. The training has a particular focus on mask, Bouffon, clown and vaudeville styles and it was here, Finch realised their love of the absurd. The new Silo Theatre show, now at The Basement in Tamaki Makaurau, Auckland is a variety show with various exaggerated characters including a has-been diva, a Miss European style MC, a punk Yorkshire poet and even, a rat. All the characters question and explore the experience and the many masks worn by trans people. The theatre is physical, comedic and involves light audience participation as Finch changes and moves through her various costumes while on stage. Freya Finch spoke to Perlina Lau of Culture 101. A Slow Burlesque is at Basement Theatre in Tamaki Makaurau, Auckland until 19 October.
Sun, 13 Oct 2024 - 12min - 410 - The great NZ pub crawl: Which is our most classic pub?
The Cardrona or the Thistle Inn? The Puhoi or Hotel De Brett? The White Hart or the Whangamomona? Which is this country’s most classic pub?
Sun, 13 Oct 2024 - 14min - 409 - Fast Favourites: Dame Susan Devoy’s surprising cultural connections
Dame Susan Devoy’s career has been nothing if not lane-changing. And as such, an inspiration for us all.
Sun, 13 Oct 2024 - 12min - 408 - Strange intelligences: the global art and tech network that’s taken root in Whangārei
There’s human intelligence - when we use it. We’re getting to grips with artificial intelligence. And many people are getting fascinated with plant intelligence - the magic work of mycelium for example. But there are other intelligences - what Awhiworld, a group of ‘artists, scientists, hackers and makers’ in Whangārei call ‘Strange Intelligences’.
Sun, 06 Oct 2024 - 20min - 407 - Chappell Roan: The rise and rise of a Midwest princess
It’s the kind of “overnight success” that has taken 10 years but it seems US singer Chappell Roan has broken through the collective pop culture consciousness, marking her territory.
Sun, 06 Oct 2024 - 29min - 406 - Regional Wrap: Greytown with Linda Kirkland
The rural town of Greytown in the Wairarapa in the lower North Island is particularly proud of its heritage and history.
Sun, 06 Oct 2024 - 07min - 405 - Everybody makes mistakes: Christine Jeffs’ powerful first feature in 16 years
We all make mistakes, but can we accept our errors and take action before things start to unravel beyond our control? In New Zealand director Christine Jeffs’ powerful new feature film A Mistake, adapted from the novel by Carl Shuker, American actor Elizabeth Banks (The Hunger Games, Pitch Perfect) plays a gifted surgeon dealing with the aftermath of an emergency surgery that went wrong. The reasons for the death that follow are complex, highlighting human fallibility and the responsibilities of everyone surrounding it.
Sun, 06 Oct 2024 - 17min - 404 - What do men want? Fashion designer and arts patron Murray Crane
The fashion designer is celebrating 25 years of the label Crane Brothers and to mark the occasion, the company is teaming up with The Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi to launch a Laureate Award for design
Sun, 06 Oct 2024 - 22min - 403 - ‘Literature saves lives’ Fast Favourites with Behrouz Boochani
“It is a cliche to say literature saves lives,” Behrouz Boochani has written, “but I experienced it with my whole being.” Behrouz Boochani is a Kurdish journalist, human rights defender, writer and film producer who came to international attention after his memoir, No Friend But the Mountains: Writing from Manus Prison won the 2019 Victorian Prize for Literature and the prize for non-fiction in Australia. He wrote it on Whatsapp while held in an Australian-run detention centre in Papua New Guinea.
Sun, 06 Oct 2024 - 17min - 402 - Arts news: a cheeky ceramics award winner, Chidgey nets Darwin and Dickens publisher and a new Christchurch artist space
Arts news: a cheeky ceramics award winner, Chidgey nets Darwin and Dickens publisher and a new Christchurch artist space
Sun, 29 Sep 2024 - 03min - 401 - Problem Pokies and 35 years of theatre marae with Jim Moriarty
The latest production by Māori theatre company Te Rākau Hua o Te Wao Tapu, Unreel tells the story of a community affected by gambling as the Hīnaki Hotel looks set to launch the very first AI pokie machine. This year Te Rākau Hua o Te Wao Tapu celebrate 35 years as Aotearoa New Zealand's longest running independent Māori Theatre Company. Co-founder and celebrated veteran actor Jim Moriarty has worked as its director for all of that time, and joins us on Culture 101.
Sun, 29 Sep 2024 - 23min - 400 - How incredible are the creations at this year’s World of Wearable Art?
The 34th season of the World of Wearable Art has kicked off in the capital - an annual spectacle of fashion, art, circus, dance and music. This year’s theme is Dream Awake, and the competition has 91 finalists from 15 countries. Joining Culture 101 to discuss the spectacle of WOW is Stuff arts journalist Andre Chumko and theatre maker and writer for Wellingtonista, Emma Maguire.
Sun, 29 Sep 2024 - 22min - 399 - Regional Wrap: An artist residency in the Rangitikei
The beautiful Rangitikei region - running alongside the river of the same name from the Manawatu to Ruapehu - is better known as a place depicted by artists than for its arts scene. It’s famous as the rural landscape depicted by painter Peter McIntyre in the mid 20th century. One notable recent initiative however, is bringing contemporary artists to the region. Laura and Richard Morrison own a sizable sheep and beef farm. Laura is an avid art collector and three years ago they set up The Gullies artists residency. So we thought we'd give Laura a call for this week's Regional Wrap.
Sun, 29 Sep 2024 - 11min - 398 - Iconic food court hosts album installation: Goodspace meets Lim Chhour
This week, artist Jefferson Chen, also known as Goodspace, is paying homage to Lim Chhour's legacy and the hardworking vendors by launching his debut album, Let's Talk About Death, with a multi-media installation Vendor.
Sun, 29 Sep 2024 - 12min - 397 - Who are we to judge? International art curator Professor Bonaventure Ndikung on the Walters’ Prize
Artist Ana Iti has been awarded Aotearoa New Zealand’s most prestigious art award, the Walters Prize at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki. Her sculpture and sound installation ‘A resilient heart like the mānawa’ is on display at the gallery. Like the UK’s Turner Prize, The Walters Prize 2024 has four finalists in exhibition, chosen by a jury. Yet, while that same jury awards the final Prize to one winner - and that jury has a solid representation of UK experts with the Turner Prize - the Walters Prize has since its inception been judged by an international curator, often coming to the Aotearoa art scene fresh.
Sun, 29 Sep 2024 - 13min - 396 - 'I’ve never been to a small Māori funeral': Kristyl Neho plays 30 characters at her dad’s tangi on stage
Hawkes Bay theatre maker Kristyl Neho (Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Kahungunu) grew up with more death around her than most people.
Sun, 29 Sep 2024 - 12min - 395 - Fast Favourites: Pōneke Wellington Deputy Mayor Laurie Foon
The Capital’s Deputy Mayor Laurie Foon has long championed Pōneke Wellington - it’s local businesses, its fashion and, sometimes more controversially, its bike lanes.
Sun, 29 Sep 2024 - 13min - 394 - Arts News for 22 September 2024
Arts News: Parekowhai's controversial giant kangaroo, Te Unua Museum of Southland's cost blowout and extinct animal discovered in rock art.
Sun, 22 Sep 2024 - 03min - 393 - What's possibly next after crocheting a to-scale woollen neon wharenui?
Has joy ever been such a crucial visible part of art as it is in the work of crochet extraordinaires Lissy and Rudi Robinson-Cole? The married couple are on a mission to bring light, warmth and Te Ao Māori to all of Aotearoa New Zealand with their electrically colourful woollen work.
Sun, 22 Sep 2024 - 27min - 392 - The remarkable friendship of iconic architects Warren and Mahoney
Maurice and I is an unexpectedly moving, delightful, at times harrowing look at the enduring partnership between architects Sir Miles Warren and Maurice Mahoney and the creation and saving of the iconic Christchurch Town Hall.
Sun, 22 Sep 2024 - 19min - 391 - Regional Wrap: Ōhinehou Lyttelton with ceramicist Grace Uivel
Each week Culture 101 puts the spotlight on a different region in Aotearoa. This week we’re in the port town of Lyttelton near Ōtautahi Christchurch.
Sun, 22 Sep 2024 - 09min - 390 - Being fearless at the world's edge: Composer Eve De Castro Robinson tries stand-up
So fearless is composer Eve De Castro Robinson that not only did she recently give a seminar entitled ‘Being Fearless’ but, now in her 60s, she recently tried doing stand-up comedy for the first time. Not typical for a composer, yet Robinson has always been bold in working with others and across artforms. She ascribes to composer John Cage’s view: “Get out of whatever cage you’re in.”
Sun, 22 Sep 2024 - 17min - 389 - Pop artist Theia releases staunch new anthem Baldh3ad
Independent, trailblazing alternative pop artist Theia has released a new musical anthem. Staunchly proud of being a wahine Māori artist, her whakapapa (Waikato-Tainui, Ngāti Tīpā) and her language, latest single Baldh3ad focuses on the “plague of colonisation”, with a direct address to the current government.
Sun, 22 Sep 2024 - 15min - 388 - Kirsty Webeck: Winning over strangers and being a ‘clean comedian’
Kirsty Webeck is one of Australia’s busiest comedians. But her path into comedy was anything but conventional.
Sun, 22 Sep 2024 - 11min - 387 - A Singapore Shimmy: Lisa Reihana’s 114,000 dazzling discs
With style and cinematic verve, if there was ever an Aotearoa artist to be dubbed disco queen it would be Lisa Reihana. Disco because her latest commissioned work on the rooftop of the National Gallery of Singapore, Glisten moves with sequins and sound. 114,000 shimmer discs dazzle in the warm breeze, complete with a soundscape. They make up patterns inspired by Southeast Asian Songket and Māori Tāniko weaving.
Sun, 22 Sep 2024 - 12min - 386 - Songs based on poems inspired by films: Bill Direen’s Dustbin of Empathy
He's reached that stage of getting called a legend of the underground and certainly, Bill Direen is one of Aotearoa New Zealand’s most singular, long serving and distinctive poets and musicians. His career began in the fertile music and theatre scene of Ōtautahi Christchurch in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s. Forming the group The Bilders (for which he has been sole constant, with a fascinating roster of international players) Direen was to be an influential figure in the early days of Flying Nun. Direen has gone on to work with numerous collaborators over numerous countries, never confined to one artform or scene; from his current home in Middlemarch Otago, to New York and time spent living in Berlin and Paris. He joins RNZ’s Culture 101 to discuss some of his recent work, which finds much of its inspiration in the history of film. He has been crowned a legend of the underground and certainly, Bill Direen is one of Aotearoa New Zealand’s most singular, long serving and distinctive poets and musicians. His career began in the fertile music and theatre scene of Ōtautahi Christchurch in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s. Forming the group The Bilders (for which he has been sole constant, with a fascinating roster of international players) Direen was to be an influential figure in the early days of Flying Nun. Direen has gone on to work with numerous collaborators over numerous countries, never confined to one artform or scene; from his current home in Middlemarch Otago, to New York and time spent living in Berlin and Paris. He joins RNZ’s Culture 101 to discuss some of his recent work, which finds much of its inspiration in the history of film.
Sun, 15 Sep 2024 - 22min - 385 - From SpongeBob to Lord of the Rings: Why are we so successful composing for film?
An area of Aotearoa New Zealand arts getting major global reach right now is music and sound for film. Culture 101 brought together three composers and musicians making inroads in this field to talk about how they make the remarkable work they do: Moniker’s Sam Flynn Scott, Lachlan Anderson and Stephen Gallagher. The reach doesn’t get much bigger. August saw the debut of the animated feature Saving Bikini Bottom, based on the television series SpongeBob SquarePants. On its premiere weekend it got 12.8 million views and 13.4 million views in its second week, making it the streaming services number one overall title.
Sun, 15 Sep 2024 - 30min - 384 - Regional Wrap: Waitohi Picton
A gateway to Te Wai Pounamu and the Marlborough Sounds, Picton has the capacity to surprise travellers with the range of cultural experiences on offer. It’s the destination for this week’s Culture 101 Regional Wrap. Barbara Speedy is the Director of The Diversion Gallery, situated on the picturesque waterfront.
Sun, 15 Sep 2024 - 07min - 383 - Designing winning kitchens with function and flair
What is the secret to designing a great kitchen? Many of us may think we have the answers, but reality can throw up plenty of challenges.
Sun, 15 Sep 2024 - 17min - 382 - Putting the real-life stories of migrant workers on stage
550 migrants or their advocates laid complaints last month. It comes as less than 2000 overseas workers arrive. Meanwhile Immigration New Zealand reports they have revoked the accreditation of 500 employers. For 200 years this has been a land of immigrants, welcoming successive waves of peoples and their cultures. We, the Outsiders is a documentary theatre piece created and inspired by migrant workers' experiences. After seasons in Ōtepoti Dunedin and Pōneke Wellington earlier this year, it’s heading this month to Auckland and Whāngarei Fringe Festivals before heading to the Melbourne Fringe.
Sun, 15 Sep 2024 - 13min - 381 - Making the leap from dance to choreography
A new show by dance group Company B is giving emerging choreographers a creative platform, and mentoring and training 10 young dancers.
Sun, 15 Sep 2024 - 15min - 380 - Fast Favourites: Maori-Samoan RnB artist Jordyn with a WhySun, 15 Sep 2024 - 13min
- 379 - Performing arts quadruple threat: Petmal Petelo
You may have heard the phrase ‘triple threat’ in the arts, but Petmal Petelo is perhaps a quadruple threat. A dancer, actor, stage manager and assistant director she’s been steadily rising in the theatre world.
Sun, 08 Sep 2024 - 20min - 378 - Giving the Dunedin Sound a shakeup: The future of the indie Ōtepoti scene
The Ōtepoti arts scene has long had a gloriously independent fertile, multi-generational, cross art form approach. But is that culture - once famously dubbed the Dunedin Sound - under threat? Many creatives are concerned. They came of age in the city from the 1980s through to the 2010s, and cite factors like increased rents and noise control provisions as practical threats to space for the city’s arts community.
Sun, 08 Sep 2024 - 27min - 377 - Regional Wrap: Feilding with Mayor Helen Worboys
Each week, Culture 101 puts the spotlight on a different part of Aotearoa. This week, we’re in Feilding in Manawatū as the town celebrates 150 years.
Sun, 08 Sep 2024 - 07min - 376 - Celebrating 10 years of Kōanga Festival
Kōanga Festival in Tāmaki Makaurau is celebrating 10 years with a packed three-and-a-half week programme and more than 12 events.
Sun, 08 Sep 2024 - 13min - 375 - The ‘what ifs’ of dazzling New Zealand modernist painter Edith Collier
The paintings that Whanganui painter Edith Collier created in England 100 years ago remain to this day, utterly fresh. At that time, there was no one in Aotearoa New Zealand painting with such modernist verve. “I am certain your fate will bring you back to England as mine did,” wrote our most celebrated artist of the period, Frances Hogkins to Collier, after she had returned home in 1921. Yet, that was not to be. Which may help explain why it’s only in recent decades we have begun recognising Collier as one of the finest of our painters of the first half of the 20th century.
Sun, 08 Sep 2024 - 18min - 374 - The Killing: Plushies, red velvet and the modern day circus
It’s a striking and brutal name for an art collective. The Killing is made up of six friends and former Elam School of Fine Arts students in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland. At the time, they say, the choice of the name reflected their mindset - angsty, angry at the institution and full of what they describe as a lot of ‘young adult feelings’.
Sun, 08 Sep 2024 - 15min - 373 - Tawata turns 20: Mīria George and Hone Kouka
Mīria George (Te Arawa, Ngāti Awa, Tumutevarovaro, Enuamanu) and Hone Kouka (Ngāti Porou, Rongowhakaata, Ngāti Kahungunu) are both acclaimed, experienced writers and directors in theatre and film in their own right. Collectively as partners in work and life they are the founders and producers of Tawata Productions, providing a platform for Māori and Pasifika artists for stage and screen.
Sun, 08 Sep 2024 - 16min - 372 - Arts News - Sunday 1 SeptemberSun, 01 Sep 2024 - 04min
- 371 - Innovative Waikato scheme pays artists basic income
What happens when you fund 10 artists a part time wage - a universal basic income - for an entire year, to help facilitate change within their community across an entire region? Over 2022 and 2023 arts agency Creative Waikato trialled such a project. Whiria Te Tāngata, was given $630,000 from the Manatū Taonga Ministry of Culture and Heritage’s Innovating Aotearoa fund. A documentary exploring a region’s worth of wellbeing by Dan Inglis premieres in Kirikiriroa Hamilton on Monday night and Whiria te Tāngata has also been the subject of a positive Social Impact Report by Australian specialist consultants Huber Social.
Sun, 01 Sep 2024 - 23min - 370 - Best of the Fest: Word Christchurch with Tina Makereti and Pip Adam
Writers, poets, musicians, artists and storytellers have descended on Otautahi Christchurch this week for the Word Festival. More than 100 guests have been taking part in sessions across venues in the city from the 27 August to 1 September.
Sun, 01 Sep 2024 - 25min - 369 - Regional Wrap: Tākaka in Mohua Golden Bay
Every week on RNZ’s Culture 101 we explore the cultural richness of this country by catching up with a local in a place, big or small. There’s no better demonstration of that richness than the cultural scene over-the-hill, top-of-the-south at Tākaka in Mohua, Golden Bay.
Sun, 01 Sep 2024 - 08min
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