Manawatu Guardian

Toi Māori gallery opens

Chance for artists to bind together in Tui Tui gallery

- Judith Lacy

“My strength is not mine alone but is the strength of many.” This is one of the proverbs that influenced Rosalie Koko’s muka and cotton applique reversible quilt.

Koko is one of 11 artists who have connection­s to the region whose work is displayed at the new toi Māori gallery Tui Tui (bind together).

The gallery is at Square Edge Arts Centre in the space previously used by Studio on The Square, and is the brainchild of new Square Edge Community Arts artistic director Erana Kaa.

She says the gallery is an opportunit­y to demonstrat­e the diversity of Māori visual arts, as it can be narrowly categorise­d. Western art, with its prioritisa­tion of visual aesthetic over cultural relevance, has imposed on Māori artists.

Palmerston North City Council has funded the space for 12 months, and the gallery has also received money from the Department of Internal Affairs.

Kaa plans to change the exhibition­s monthly or bi-monthly. The inaugural exhibition is on display until mid-March.

For October, she has booked Maihi Potaka and hopes to have a moving image installati­on to celebrate Puanga/Matariki.

Kaa said she already has Māori artists approachin­g her looking to be included in the gallery.

At the moment, there are pockets of artists using a Māori visual language, and she hopes Tui Tui will help create a collective.

Kaa curated an exhibition in the foyer of Centrepoin­t Theatre of Māori artists to support Two Guitars last spring, and this planted the seed for Tui Tui.

Kaa wants Tui Tui to show the community the depth and breadth of Māori visual arts and also provide an experience for artists to elevate their curation.

Twenty people did the stitching for Koko’s quilt, which is a fusion of Māori and Pasifika art crafting styles.

Koko travelled from Wellington to Napier by bus to pick up the quilt, which had been stored at a family member’s house, then bused to Palmerston North. She had just 20 minutes to get the quilt to Kaa before she had to get back on the bus.

Kaa started as artistic director in September. She replaced Karen Seccombe, who now works at the National Collective of Independen­t Women’s Refuges.

Kaa has five galleries to curate at Square Edge: entrance, main, Tui Tui, display cabinets and pop-up.

She wants to shift perception­s about who belongs in the building and allow for people from different communitie­s to see themselves on the walls in meaningful ways.

Last year, Kaa completed a PhD on indigenisa­tion of apparel constructi­on. She taught art for 12 years at Turakina Māori Girls’ College until it closed in 2015.

A harakeke kete she made is part of the exhibition.

The other artists are Lisa Bartlett, Jess Collins, Vanessa Wairata Edwards, Pania Molloy, Asher Raawiri Newbery, Ripeka Paapu, Locke Pickah, Jordan Quinnell and Stacey Ratapu.

 ?? ?? Square Edge Community Arts artistic director Erana Kaa in the new Tui Tui gallery.
Square Edge Community Arts artistic director Erana Kaa in the new Tui Tui gallery.

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