KARAKIA Nā Ranea Aperahama
Toiora: Ki te Pō ki te Ao The Art of Wellbeing: Through Light and Shadow
Hou mai ki ngā toi auaha ā ngā ringatoi tokoiwa. Ka whakakitea ai te āhua o te whanaketanga mutunga kore o ngā tikanga tuku iho, me te whakaputanga ki Rangiātea.
Ko tā ēnei toi he toko i ngā kōrero mō te ara whanaunga o te kaupapa atua ki te kaupapa tangata, ko te whakatinanatanga o te kupu, Ko te taiao ko te tangata e kotahi tonu.
Experience the innovative artworks of nine artists through the ever-evolving nature of customary art practices, and their expression that seeks balance of light and shadow.
These artworks evoke the traditional narratives regarding the atua Māori and the mutual connection to humankind, the embodiment of the statement, Nature and humanity are one.
Kohai Grace Exhibition Curator
I think a lot about the over-consuming world we live in, with excessive waste, pollution, greed versus environmental care, and other destructive human activity and behaviours that disregard te taiao. Our connection to nature has been lost.
To create this work, I’ve pulled together a mix of things collected over time, such as muka (flax fibre), and a piece of merino cloth I eco-dyed using toatoa tree bark. I also searched second-hand shops for a cylindrical form to create this representation of Hineraumati, the summer deity, and her husband Tamanuiterā, the sun. These two display visual warning signs that could be looked upon as beauty, but they know differently; they dislike what they have become.
This piece is my response to global warming and climate change. ‘Ka hoki te waiora ki te ao’ is a whakatauki or proverbial saying that pleads for all of us to restore health to the world and therefore, to ourselves.