Exhibition listing

Lalaga: Le Hui Fono

2 November 2024 – 25 May 2025

Lalaga: Le Hui Fono is an exhibition and programmes that emerge from an ongoing commitment to deepen relationships of collaboration, mutual support, and reciprocity between Pasifika artists and communities in Taranaki and across Te Moana-nui-a-Kiwa.

The project draws from the practices and wisdom of Lalaga/Raranga/Lalanga in seeking to weave together new and existing connections through creative practice and generate outcomes that uplift the aspirations of local communities.

Lalaga: Le Hui Fono features new works, including some created in the gallery during the exhibition produced in response to a series of residencies and exchanges among artists from Ngāmotu, Sāmoa, Fiji, and Tonga that commenced in 2022. The inclusion of significant historical works also encourages a rekindling of connections and fosters new exchanges of knowledge and storytelling. The making, workshops, performance and talanoa throughout Lalaga: Le Hui Fono will transform the gallery into a space for sharing knowledge, questions, conversations, and creative possibilities that are shaped by Pasifika communities and creatives and contribute to collective culture and wellbeing.

Lalaga has been guided by Theresa Tongi, the Gallery’s Pacific Public Program Coordinator, Ruha Fifita, Govett-Brewster Pacific Curator at Large and the Gallery’s Te Moana nui-a-Kiwa Advisory Group.

Collaborative works have been made possible through relationships to creatives and communities in:

Lalomauga, Lelepa, Leulumoega, Malie, Manase, Moata‘a and Vaiee Villages, Samoa.
Moce Island and Nasinu village, Fiji.
Vaimalo, Haveluloto, and Holonga Villages, Tonga.
Tāmaki Makaurau, Parihaka and Waitara, Aotearoa.

Personal responses have been contributed by the following artists and collectives:

Kim Kahu
Itāmua Muaiāoomālō Mataiva D Robertson
Kesaia Biuvanua
Amy Sao Tui
Suzan Kostanich
Tevita Latu
Taniela Petelo
Yasmin Aho
Sean Hill
Haoro Hond
With members from Seleka International Arts Society Initiative
Hikule‘o ‘o Ono’aho (Tu‘ifonualava Kaivelata, ‘Uluakimaka Kaivelata)
Mahi Moana (Tau‘ili‘ili Alpha Maiava)

Join the artists in conversation with Kairauhī Curator Robbie Hancock on Wednesday 30 July at 6pm.
The $1,500 award will be given to the most original contribution to Len Lye scholarship.
This July, Arts Makers Aotearoa (AMA) will be launching a new service, the Artist Advice Bureau. Here, we speak to Art Aunty Claudia Jowitt, who will be hosting drop-in (or Zoom-in) sessions at Samoa House Library on Karangahape Road, offering independent advice and advocacy for artists trying to navigate the industry.
The artwork, by Graham Tipene and Amy Hawke, is on view 17 June through 13 July at Viaduct Harbour.
The sculpture was designed and constructed by emerging architects George Culling, Oliver Prisk, Henry Mabin and André Vachias.
Recipients Quishile Charan, Harry Freeth and p.Walters will exhibiting at Tautai later this year.
Expressions of interest are due by 15 June for the programme, based at the Macmillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies at Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha | University of Canterbury (UC).
Exhibition proposals for 2026 are now open and close on Monday 30 June.
The new exhibition offers a fresh take on how stories about Ngā Pakanga o Aotearoa the New Zealand Wars have been told on film.
Sally Dan-Cuthbert answers our questions ahead of her eponymous gallery's debut at the 2025 Aotearoa Art Fair, presenting works by Sabine Marcelis, Lisa Reihana and Edward Waring.
Our curated selection of exhibitions taking place around the country this autumn.

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