Artists

  • Sosefina Andy, Nikau Hindin, Louisa Humphry, Wikuki Kingi, Pacifica Mamas, The Veiqia Project
teuru.org.nz

“The past is alive in us, so in more than a metaphorical sense the dead are alive - we are our history.” – Epeli Hau’ofa

Cultural knowledge, within Māori and Moana communities, has often been passed on through familial lines, both orally or embodied in particular practices and ceremonies. As with any knowledges, these practices are always in flux, responsive to shifting conditions. Colonisation, capitalism and migration have had a particular impact on how practices are continued. Some fall out of use; others adapt to new materials; still others continue on, fuelled by social functions and significance.

The exhibition names held in our mouths considers the work of six artists and collectives reviving and sustaining indigenous art, with a particular focus on dormant or at-risk practices. Working primarily outside of formal institutions, these modes of revival and transmission, which range from transnational exchanges, museum studies, and close reading of texts, often depend upon and result in a collective impulse. They also expose a number of oscillating concerns, such as the twin needs of protectionism and open sharing; revival and adaptation; local and global influences. It is often cited in Tongan and Māori language, that we walk backwards into the future. As artists consider what to safeguard for the posterity, we can conceive of the present as a moment pregnant with the past, both informed by and actively constructing our future histories.

Sosefina Andy, Nikau Hindin, Louisa Humphry, Wikuki Kingi, Pacifica Mamas, The Veiqia Project

Curated by Ioana Gordon-Smith

Opening Hours

  • Monday - Sunday 10am - 4.30pm

Te Uru Waitākere Contemporary Gallery

  • 420 Titirangi Road
  • Auckland 0604