The Post

The future looks bright for Aotearoa’s emerging artists

- Ensemble

Mentorship is an essential part of nurturing emerging talent within fashion and the arts. When insight that can only be learned through real industry experience is shared, it creates opportunit­ies for new perspectiv­es, and a more vibrant and diverse industry as a whole.

The value of this often reciprocal exchange of knowledge is what The Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi’s Springboar­d programme is all about. Now in its fifth year, it will pair seven early-career artists with establishe­d figures to help guide them kick-start a sustainabl­e career in the arts. Ensemble is proud to be the media partner for this year's Springboar­d.

This year’s duos, announced today, are an outstandin­g group of artists across a diverse range of discipline­s: Emily Parr (moving image), mentored by Laureate Tanu Gago of FAFSWAG Collective; Emma Hislop (literature), mentored by Patricia Grace; Flo Wilson (music and sonic arts), mentored by 2008 Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi New Generation recipient Jeff Henderson; Hash Perambalam (film; mentor TBC). Joshua Faleatau and Tyler Carney (dance, film), mentored by 2021 Laureate, filmmaker Florian Habicht; and Louie Zalk–Neale (visual arts), mentored by Arts Foundation Laureate Bridget Reweti of Mata Aho Collective.

As well as invaluable mentorship, Springboar­d

recipients also receive a $15,000 gift that artists can choose to put towards a project, or help to pause and reflect on their practice.

“The tautoko of a tuakana will be invaluable because I’ve never written a novel before and I’m writing into the dark. I’m excited about the possibilit­ies. Paid time to write is the dream and the pūtea is greatly welcomed,” says mentee Emma Hislop, who will be mentored by Patricia Grace.

In a statement, Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi general manager Jessica Palalagi said that this year’s group continued to build an amazing alumni of early-career artists, bringing together a powerful cohort of creatives from across the discipline­s.

She acknowledg­es that this essential support for artists is only possible thanks to the generosity of families and individual­s, including a new Springboar­d package this year gifted by Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi Laureate Dr. Fiona Pardington.

Previous Springboar­d mentor Oscar Kightley says the programme creates a pathway where there isn't one, and forges valuable mentor-mentee relationsh­ips for life.

“It’s also good for the mentors to see the issues that are still the same and to see where maybe you were, and to be able to offer a way through and be able to say ‘it's all right, this is normal, this is exactly as it should be – and you're going to get through this, you just have to stick at it,” he says.

 ?? ?? The Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi’s Springboar­d programme is pairing seven early-career artists with establishe­d figures. They are – top, from left: Hash Perambalam, Joshua Faleatau and Tyler Carney, Louie Zalk–Neale. Bottom, from left: Flo Wilson, Emily Parr and Emma Hislop.
The Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi’s Springboar­d programme is pairing seven early-career artists with establishe­d figures. They are – top, from left: Hash Perambalam, Joshua Faleatau and Tyler Carney, Louie Zalk–Neale. Bottom, from left: Flo Wilson, Emily Parr and Emma Hislop.
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