Creative New Zealand Arts Pasifika Awards
Creative New Zealand press release
For immediate
release
Excellence and promise praised with Creative New Zealand Arts Pasifika Awards
The creators of internationally acclaimed theatre, courageous South Auckland art exhibitions and education programmes on heritage arts are among the winners of this year’s Creative New Zealand Arts Pasifika Awards.
Established in 1996, the awards celebrate Pacific achievement across all artforms and were broadened this year to include even more quality Pacific artists. As well as opera singers, the Iosefa Enari Memorial Award now recognises musicians or composers from all classical genres and career stages.
The awards will be presented at a ceremony in Wellington on 14 November.
“These unique awards celebrate Pacific artists who have helped to shape the New Zealand arts landscape,” says Pele Walker, Chair of the Pacific Arts Committee of Creative New Zealand. “Their work, and the promise shown by the emerging artists, gives a strong voice to Pasifika art, identity and culture in Aotearoa.”
Senior Pacific
Artist
Lemi Ponifasio, founder and director of one of
New Zealand’s most prolific international contemporary
dance and theatre companies MAU, has won the Senior Pacific
Artist Award. Ritual and ceremony are central to Lemi’s
work, transforming Polynesian traditions into radically
modern theatre with a strong political message. An
acknowledged pioneer in contemporary Pacific theatre and
dance, Lemi recently directed the opera Prometheus at the
Ruhrtriennale festival in Germany. His award winning work
Birds with Sky Mirrors was a favourite among audiences of
the New Zealand International Arts Festival 2012 and like
many of his other epic productions, it received resounding
praise from European audiences. Under Lemi’s directorship,
MAU (formed in 1995 and named after the Samoan independence
movement) has performed at major international theatres and
festivals including the Edinburgh International Festival,
Theatre de la Ville Paris and the Venice Biennale. Lemi was
an Arts Laureate Award winner in 2011 and received the
Contemporary Pacific Art Award at the Arts Pasifika Awards
in 2004.
Contemporary Pacific Artist
South
Auckland-based curator Ema Tavola, is the recipient of the
Contemporary Pacific Artist Award. Now self-employed as a
Pacific art advocate, Ema was the “young and vivacious”
manager of Fresh Gallery Otara for six years. In that time
she established a reputation for bringing provocative,
courageous and inspiring exhibitions to the South Auckland
community, designed for and with its members. Ema’s vision
has created opportunities for others, both artists and
audiences. Born in Suva, Ema is a trained visual artist and
has curated over 80 exhibitions. The late Jim Viviaere
helped her to see curating as a valid extension of visual
arts practice. “I saw that it was about relationships,
presentation, hosting, advocacy and writing -I loved it”.
Ema was an Associate Curator for the recent, Home AKL
exhibition at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki.
Pacific
Heritage
For over 20 years a group of Pacific artists in
Auckland, under the leadership of Cook Islands born Mary
Ama, have met regularly to share, revive and grow Pacific
arts and culture. Today Mary and the women who work with her
(the Mamas) are the “heart and soul” of the Corban
Estate Arts Centre’s Pacific Arts and Cultural Centre. The
winners of this year’s Pacific Heritage Arts Award run
regular public education classes to teach the essence and
diversity of Pacific arts and cultures, they also support
local artists and contribute to economic and community
development. Mary is an expert in the art of tīvaevae -
Cook Island quilt making. She is the Pacific Island Arts
Advocate for Auckland Council, a prison art tutor and was
instrumental in establishing the Waitakere Pacifica Living
Arts Festival, an event that draws crowds of 15,000.
Iosefa Enari Memorial Award
Samoan soprano Isabella
Moore has won the Iosefa Enari Memorial Award. The
22-year-old was a semi-finalist in this year’s prestigious
Lexus Song Quest and won the Radio New Zealand Listeners’
Choice Award for her performance. In 2011 she won first
place in the Own Selection category of the Dame Malvina
Major Foundation Aria competition. As the granddaughter of
renowned poet and writer Emeritus Professor Albert Wendt,
and the partner of Lexus Song Quest winner Amitai Pati,
Isabella is surrounded by high level achievement in the
arts. Now a student at Victoria University of Wellington’s
New Zealand School of Music, Isabella has also trained at
the New Zealand Opera School and plans to advance her
studies internationally and complete a Masters of Music.
Emerging Pacific Artist
Dancer Justin Haiu is the
recipient of the Emerging Pacific Artist Award. Justin has
worked with legendary choreographer Michael Parmenter,
toured award winning work internationally and won coveted
awards. With a background in street theatre and hip hop
performance, Justin received his formal training at Brent
Street School of Performing Arts in Sydney. He then became a
cast member of Disney's Theatre Production The Lion King. A
founding member of the New Zealand Dance Company, Justin
incorporates his Wallis and Futuna heritage into
contemporary choreography. On a dance residency in Noumea
in 2009, Justin learned the traditional war dance, soamako
and has blended this relatively unseen style of dance, of
his Uvean father, into his work and teaching of aspiring
Pacific dancers. Justin was a finalist in the 2006
television show So You Think You Can Dance, won the
inaugural Pacific Dance Artist in Residence in 2010 and was
the Overall Winner at the 2012 Short and Sweet Dance
Festival.
ENDS