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Culture 101

Perlina Lau hosts a weekly show about creativity and culture in Aotearoa.
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Episodes

Regional wrap: Wairoa's Denise Eaglesome-Karekare

The name of the northern Hawkes Bay river town of Wairoa has been translated as "the long water which bubbles, swirls and is uneven". That certainly became true earlier this year when Cyclone Gabrielle swallowed the town, leaving a flooded trail of destruction in its path. But what of life beyond that catastrophic event? What makes Wairoa special? Wairoa's Deputy Mayor Denise Eaglesome-Karekare fills Maggie Tweedie in on what sees the rural town thrive culturally. From Osler's Bakery award winni...

Oct 29, 202311 min

Making visible the relationship between hard labour and the Pacific: John Vea and Jasmine Togo-Brisby

While other kids went to kindergarten, when he was a small child Tongan New Zealand artist John Vea was on the factory floor where his father worked. The experience has led Vea to make the relationship between factory and manual labour work and the Pacific Island community central to his performances, sculpture and installations. Exhibition Outcast at Tamaki Makaurau’s Gus Fisher Gallery brings Vea together with fourth-generation Australian South Sea Islander artist Jasmine Togo-Brisby.

Oct 29, 202314 min

Small, precious and shiny new: Kāpiti Coast regional gallery opens

Toi Mahara gallery director Janet Bayly offers the whakatauki: ‘ahakoa he iti he pounamu’, when she speaks of the Kāpiti Coast’s regional Gallery in Waikanae. “The gift of something small but precious.” Small, precious and also shiny new, the opening of an Athfield Architects designed purpose-built building for Toi Mahara has been 20 years in the making. A picturesque one hour train ride north of Wellington, the public gallery has opened its doors with a weekend of celebrations October 28 to 29....

Oct 28, 202310 min

Ballet legend Sir Jon Trimmer remembered by young and old close to him

This week saw the passing of a legend in the arts in Aotearoa. Sir Jon Trimmer, arguably New Zealand’s most beloved dancer has died aged 84. With him to the end in Paekākāriki alongside his wife Lady Jacqui was Sir Jon’s older sister Coral Trimmer. Now aged 93, Coral is of similar enduring stock. An acclaimed jazz and classical musician, she started playing the harmonica 88 years ago, and continues to play. Mark Amery spoke to Coral at home about Jon’s passing.

Oct 28, 202323 min

Fast Favourites: Dr Mike Joy on the role of artists in preventing ecological collapse

Freshwater ecologist, environmental science researcher and activist Dr Mike Joy is a well known outspoken voice in the need for our society to make radical changes to deal with our major environmental crises. He is one of Aotearoa’s foremost public scientists, but also a supporter of artists and art projects as a way of raising awareness to enable change.

Oct 28, 202313 min

Rosie Dawson-Hewes' art table for others in Tauranga

Culture lover and curator Rosie Dawson-Hewes is passionate about accessibility in the arts. It led her to collaborate with a new Bay of Plenty art patron Fiona Menzies to create A Seat at the Table at this month’s Tauranga Arts Festival (19-28 October).

Oct 22, 202311 min

Bernie Harfleet and Turtle Sarten: art through acts of community kindness

Henderson artists Bernie Harfleet and Turtle Sarten make visible the things we often find uncomfortable to talk about. Urgent social issues all around us: like family harm, mental health and poverty. These self-described creators of 'Community Activated Art Action' do remarkable things. Since 2002 Bernie and Turtle have been staging installations that involve public participation to raise awareness and encourage action.

Oct 22, 202323 min

Tokomaru Bay’s Māori clay art pioneer Baye Riddell

It took until the 1970s for Toi Māori (Māori art) to develop a tradition in clay (uku). One that in part looks back to an ancestral Lapita pottery tradition across the Pacific. Today, the collective artist-led rise of this unique ceramics movement stands as a striking development in contemporary Māori art: Ngā Kaihanga Uku, the makers with clay.

Oct 22, 202312 min

Dr Maia Nuku: taking Pacific power back at The Met

Museums are really theatres of political power, says Maia Nuku, curator of Oceania at one of the biggest: The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Nuku (Ngāi Tai) is interested in the way museums can provide greater access and in the Big Apple that has meant creating a home for Māori and Pacific Island peoples and artists.

Oct 15, 202323 min

Can sculpture help you sleep at night?

Wellington artist Bailee Lobb has had a "combative" relationship with sleep her whole life. In the upcoming performance-installation How do you sleep at night? she'll use a range of "non-pharmaceutical sleep aids" to try and nod off at a Nelson gallery.

Oct 15, 202324 min

The enduring legacy of visionary architect Rewi Thompson

In 2016 Aotearoa lost architect and teacher Rewi Thompson too young. But as an innovative new book reveals - Rewi: Āta haere, kia tere - Thompson’s legacy lives on not only in buildings and public projects but also his imaginative drawings and teaching.

Oct 15, 202324 min

Sounds of the underground: Dunedin’s Lines of Flight Festival

Peter Porteous is a musician based in Dunedin who organises an experimental music festival called Lines of Flight. The idea was bred from a friendship he shared with mate and late collaborator Peter Stapleton for years. Maggie Tweedie asks Peter Porteous about some of the lesser known and more mesmerizing music coming from The South. While he selects the sounds that showcase the analgoue and abstract.

Oct 15, 202316 min

Jamie McCaskill: recovering te reo and tikanga with two guitars

An award-winning playwright, actor, musician and founder of the Maori Sidesteps, Jamie McCaskill’s latest play Two Guitars is a musical journey examining those of a generation of Māori find themselves lost who have grown up without te reo and tikanga and find themselves lost.

Oct 08, 20237 min

Making photographs with mud and glowworms

Madison Emond from Rhode Island has been building pinhole cameras from clay in Wellington’s Kaiwharawhara stream. Her photographic work is a vessel for the natural environment, capturing life by and under water by wrapping film around glow worms and river stones.

Oct 08, 202312 min

Regional Wrap: in Hastings with Pitsch Leiser

Every week on Culture 101 we check the pulse of a different area of Aotearoa. This week, we’re off to Hastings, ahead of the Hawkes Bay Arts Festival 13-29 October.

Oct 08, 20239 min

Tokyo's Techno Kiwi: George Nelson

George Nelson is a New Zealander living in Japan with a passion for haiku, techno and fashion. The pages of, The Techno Kiwi reveal a delightful fusion of both Japanese and New Zealand cultures, using native New Zealand birds, techno and hip hop, Japanese and English.

Oct 07, 20238 min
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