Māoriland invites film, video, digital and interactive media work and artwork (all mediums) made by Indigenous creatives to submit their projects for Māoriland Film Festival 2025.
Te Tipu O Te Māhuri is a 12-week kaupapa Māori workplace training program in Art Gallery Curation, Administration and Events based at Toi Matarau Gallery.
Five Māori film projects will be supported to develop and pitch on a global stage.
The talents of rangatahi filmmakers are to be shown on the big screen in Toronto, Canada next month with the selection of FOUR short films by young Māori filmmakers.
Māoriland is proud to announce the release of Tama Kaiātea, an animated feature film that’s been reversioned into the Māori language in time for Mahuru Māori.
Māoriland Film Festival celebrates the return of international filmmakers to Aotearoa to present their films at the largest international Indigenous film festival in the world.
Māoriland is excited to announce the dates for its 2022 Indigenous film festival and its new Matariki Ramaroa light arts festival.
After the successful reversioning into te reo Māori of animated series ‘Island Of Mystery’ (playing on TVNZ) Māoriland has its first feature film, the popular ASTRO KID.
Support rangatahi animator Turanga Mahutonga to make Waiata Bro's - a series of fun animated music videos that teach te reo Māori
'Matariki Lighting the Beacons Festival' is a month-long multi-disciplinary arts festival to be held across the Kāpiti Region, July 2 - 25, 2021.
Immerse yourself in a world of Toi Māori at MFF2021!
The 8th annual film festival will present 120 films and 50 events from 80 Indigenous nations over five days in March (24th – 28th).