Hōhua Thompson, Kua whati te rākau research image, 2022, digital drawing. Courtesy of the artist and Enjoy Contemporary
Photo Credit
Hōhua Thompson, Kua whati te rākau research image, 2022, digital drawing. Courtesy of the artist and Enjoy Contemporary
Photo Credit
Join Enjoy Contemporary from 5:30 pm Thursday 10/02 for the opening of two new projects: Hanna Shim 심한나 Wishing you well and Hōhua Thompson Kua whati te rākau.
COVID-19 LEVEL RED
Tension and precarity are not new concepts for most cultures, especially since the upheaval caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Māori have dealt with these issues before. Great migrations, wars and the constant onslaught of colonisation have given us examples of how our tīpuna handled these situations.
Kua whati te rākau is a meditation on resilience in te ao Māori explored through installations of elastic strapped rimu combining tradition and adaptability. Artist Hōhua Thompson draws inspiration from pūrakau relating to the migration of ancestral waka Te Arawa and has produced these new works in his homeland Rotorua and his current home Whanganui, in collaboration with his mother and father.
Join Enjoy Contemporary from 5:30 pm Thursday 10/02 for the opening of two new projects: Hanna Shim 심한나 Wishing you well and Hōhua Thompson Kua whati te rākau.
COVID-19 LEVEL RED
Tension and precarity are not new concepts for most cultures, especially since the upheaval caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Māori have dealt with these issues before. Great migrations, wars and the constant onslaught of colonisation have given us examples of how our tīpuna handled these situations.
Kua whati te rākau is a meditation on resilience in te ao Māori explored through installations of elastic strapped rimu combining tradition and adaptability. Artist Hōhua Thompson draws inspiration from pūrakau relating to the migration of ancestral waka Te Arawa and has produced these new works in his homeland Rotorua and his current home Whanganui, in collaboration with his mother and father.