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Te Atuitanga - Between Our Cloak of Stars

25/06/22  to 16/07/22
Saturday 25th June to Saturday 16th July
Te Atuitanga - Between Our Cloak of Stars

Closes

May 27, 2025

Posted on

Feb 26, 2025

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Price:

Free

Venue:

Bergman Gallery Auckland

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Written by

Bergman Gallery | Auckland
Feb 26, 2025
Auckland Gallery Opening Exhibition
All welcome

 

Kia Orana, Bergman Gallery is pleased to announce the opening of a new gallery space in Tāmaki Makaurau, Auckland. Gallery director Ben Bergman states, ‘We are constantly exploring new opportunities for the artists that we represent. The new exhibition space in Auckland evolves the gallery mission to develop and exhibit Pacific artists on a domestic, regional and international level. Our extension into the largest Pacific city in the world is an important part of that strategy. We also look forward to being part of the history of K Road, with its unique connection to the Pacific and LGBTQIA+ community and position within Auckland’s art gallery forum.'

The inaugural group show will feature new works by Mahiriki Tangaroa, Andy Leleisi’uao, Sylvia Marsters, Telly Tuita, Nina Oberg Humphries, Michel Tuffery, Benjamin Work, Raymond Sagapolutele & Kulimoe’anga Stone Maka.

The gallery space will be officially opened by Caren Rangi, Chair, Arts Council of New Zealand, Toi Aotearoa. 

Te Atuitanga - Between Our Cloak of Stars
Paintings, Photography, Sculpture
June 25 – July 16
 
Opening Saturday June 25, 2:30 - 5:30pm
Welcoming & Blessing 2:30pm
 
Suite 3
582 Karangahape Road
Gallery entrance via 2 Newton Road
Auckland

Gallery hours:
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 5:30pm
 

Telly Tuita, War in Spring, 1060x1350mm, digital print on cotton rag paper.

 

Connection is a powerful sensation, how we relate to each other, and our environment underpins our story, or in Aotearoa, your whakapapa.
 
Our Pacific is a powerful story of connection, from the time of the original Polynesian explorers to today, it is a shared story of heritage that binds us together.
 
Today, this gallery establishes itself in Aotearoa, the first Cook Islands gallery to do so. It achieves this with the support of a core group of artists that share a vision to elevate the standing and exhibition of Modern Pacific Art.
 
It is also the time of Ngā mata o te ariki Tāwhirmātea (the eyes of the god Tāwhirmātea) or Matariki. Matariki is the star cluster Pleiades and for Aotearoa, signals the beginning of the Māori lunar cycle. It is a time to reflect on the year that was, honour ancestors and look to the year ahead.
 
Which is what we do now.

 

The exhibition Te Atuitanga - Between Our Cloak of Stars celebrates an evolution of Pacific understanding and shared heritage. These 9 artists are exceptional Pacific artists of Polynesian legacy, and they stand together here now, in Tāmaki Makaurau, the largest Pacific city in the world with an authoritative statement. They form part of an enduring narrative that continually questions our origins, who they/we are, where we are going and what we mean, to our community, to each other and to our place in the world.
 
It draws into focus the meaning of the word Pacific, its people, culture, and its collective aspirations. As current regional developments play out; it is a timely political and cultural conversation.
 
The ancient navigators, Tohunga kōkōrangi, used the stars and the star clusters like Matariki to navigate the vast Pacific Ocean and find new land. This skill was revived almost 50 years ago and remains in active use today; double hulled Vaka once again traverse the oceans.
 
But the search parameters have now changed, and it is not land that is being sought but knowledge is. In the rediscovery of important traditional knowledge, we take information from the past to fortify our future. Today, Pacific artists actively research and explore the rich, rediscovered history of the Polynesians, generating artforms and important discussion of place, self and opportunity. Of most importance they collectively speak to an informed future on a global stage.
 
As Epeli Hau’ofa stated in his essay ‘Our Sea of Islands’; ‘The world of Oceania may no longer include the heavens and the underworld; but it certainly encompasses the great cities of Australia, New Zealand, the USA and Canada. And it is within his expanded world that the extent of the people's resources must be measured.’
 
One of our resources is visual art and it speaks to you right now, between our cloak of stars.  

 
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