Re-Tern: Hokinga Mahara - A Meg Torwl Retrospective
Re-Tern: Hokinga Mahara - A Meg Torwl Retrospective March 5 -10 2013
Aoteaora/New
Zealand artist Meg Torwl, who has spent much of her artistic
career working in Canada, returns to Wellington with an
interdisciplinary exhibition Re-Tern: Hokinga Mahara. March
5 -10 2013, Thistle Hall Gallery, Cuba St, Wellington.
Co-curators Elizabeth Kerekere and Treason Seditio in association with the Fringe Festival 2013 Wellington, and LAGANZ present an interdisciplinary exhibition - video, new media, performance, photography, audio, writing. (images: megtorwl@gmail.com)
From a close encounter with a purple starfish to filming the Deputy Prime Minister of Afghanistan and interviewing Aoteraoa/New Zealand’s beloved Mahinarangi Tocker, to working with local Wellington and international artists, Meg Torwl has done it all. Meg Torwl’s work has often been with communities pushed to the fringes by mainstream society – First Nations, refugees, women, lesbian and gay, people with disabilities, elders; and marine environments. In her work Meg Torwl seeks to discover how our cultural backgrounds inform our approaches to age, gender(cide), race, disability, relationships, art and spirit. Re-tern includes photography from 1990 in Wellington, Auckland and Waitangi, in support of Maori Sovereignty.
Aesthetically her work traverses closely observed autobiography, photo-journalism, documentary, layered patterning, and magical realism. Her artistic career both in Aotearoa/New Zealand, and in Canada has been defined by learning from mentors, cross-cultural engagement, collaboration, and an interdisciplinary approach.
‘For
me it’s always about what’s the story or what’s the
image or what’s the issue, and what’s the best way to
portray that? Is that video... is that radio, is that an
installation? Is it a photo, is it a poem? Is it live, is it
recorded?’ – Meg Torwl
From an interview
with Philip Patston of Creative Momentum, NZ
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http://integrialmedia.blogspot.co.nz/p/re-tern-hokinga-mahara-meg-torwl.html
The Armstrong and Arthur Trust.
EXHIBITION
HOURS:
Tuesday, 5th March: 2pm-10pm
Wednesday, 6th
March – Saturday, 9th March: 12pm-6pm
Sunday, 10th
March: 11am-3pm
EXHIBITION EVENTS
OPENING TUESDAY MARCH 5th 6pm – 10pm – reception and artist talk with Meg Torwl and collaborating artists. Facilitated by curator Elizabeth Kerekere.
SCREENING THURSDAY 7th MARCH 7pm –
10pm
Video Screening: Towards the day...we are all free.
90 mins (a documentary about First Nations Women, and women
and girl refugees).
SCREENING SATURDAY 9th MARCH 2pm –
4pm
Video Screening: Act Your Age!? 45 mins, That’s so
gay! 45 mins, and Where have all the lesbians gone? 7
minutes (total 100 mins)
BIO: ARTIST
Meg Torwl works in video, new media, audio, photography, writing and performance, and arts advocacy. Her work has been exhibited, broadcast, published and performed in NZ, Canada, the US, and the UK. Meg Torwl trained in video production through an Out On Screen Queer Video Scholarship Program at VIVO Media Arts Centre (Vancouver 2000). She has produced five new media projects - meditative color and water photography based installations: - Singing Bowls (2004), AQWAI (2006), TIARIKA (2008), Going Coastal, (2010) and PORTAL/PORTAGE (2011). Meg has directed four documentaries which are distributed by Video Out, Act Your Age!? (2000), where have all the lesbians gone? (2001), Dr Sima Simar (2002), Towards the day...we are all free (2007). She produced 50 half-hour programs with Radio New Zealand National’s One in Five disability community program (2007/8), with a focus on youth, art, multiculturalism and policy. Meg has worked with and for Canadian filmmakers Annie Frazier-Henry (2002), and Bonnie Sherr-Klein (2003). She has worked for arts organisations in Community Outreach and Project Coordination for the National Film Board of Canada (2004), CBC TV (2006), KickstArt Disability Arts and Culture (2009/10), BC Regional Integrated Arts Network (2010), and is currently a Board member of KickstArt. Meg was commissioned in 2009 by Balancing Acts to write and perform a solo interdisciplinary show That’s so gay! with director Jan Derbyshire. Meg is a graduate of The Writers Studio 2011, at Simon Fraser University with mentor Jen Currin, and Director Betsy Warland. In 2012 her second poetry chapbook Transit of Venus was short-listed for the Doire Press prize in Ireland. She is a member of the NZ Society of Authors, and recently place second in their Queer Flash Fiction writing competition.
Elizabeth Kerekere. Te Aitanga a Mahaki, Te Whanau a
Kai, Te Aitanga a Hauiti,
Rongowhakaata, Ngai Te
manuhiri, Ngati Ruapani. Director Te Po Kerekere
Gallery
Elizabeth has over 30 years of experience working within Maori and other community organizations. She has been active in LGBTIQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, takatapui, intersex and queer) communities for over 20 years with an increasing focus on the health and well-being of takatapui (Maori who identify as LGBTIQ) and queer youth. She is the founder and Chair of Tiwhanawhana Trust for takatapui (since 2000) and sits on the Board of LAGANZ (Lesbian & Gay Archive of NZ Board - since 2007).
Elizabeth’s work in the art sector (since 1985) includes assisting with the design of Te Papa Tongarewa (Te Papa) Museum of New Zealand; being a consultant for Creative New Zealand; and curating exhibitions at the Dowse Art Museum, Hutt City. Elizabeth is also a visual artist who works in a range of media including painting, graphic design, weaving, tukutuku, relief, clay and carving. She recently completed a Bachelor of Maori Visual Arts with her solo exhibition ‘I Te Po Kerekere’ in Gisborne November 2012. Upcoming projects include a commission for the United Nations in New York (2012-13) and a touring exhibition in USA (2013-14).
Since
2002, Elizabeth has managed her own consultancy in Treaty
Relations, strategic planning and project management; Te Pō
Kerekere Consultants. In 2010 she formed Te Po Kerekere
Gallery to reflect her artistic and curatorial focus.
Elizabeth is also part way through the first PhD on
takataapui, through Victoria University of Wellington.
Elizabeth Kerekere will also be curator of an exhibition at
the Thistle Hall Gallery, February 11 –17 2013. ‘Te Ha o
Hineteiwaiwa’ will present the work of four Maori
(indigenous) women artists who consider issues of identity,
motherhood and the
land.
ends