New videos explore the art of eating
New videos by Rachael Rakena explore the art of eating
Exhibition runs until 13 June 2009
Technology and culture combine in a sumptuous new exhibition by Rachael Rakena a leading Maori exponent of video art. This solo exhibition follows her highly acclaimed collaborations which have featured in some of the world¹s top art events including the Busan Biennale 2008, the Venice Biennale 2007 and the Sydney Biennale 2006.
The exhibition titled He
Waiata Whaiaipo is, in the first instance, an examination of
the cultural specificities of food. But it is also a love
song in moving image employing the act of eating as a
metaphor to play out ideas about desire, pursuit and
fulfilment. In three different videos, a solitary and
self-contained man eats mango and fishheads in a dark and
watery world, which is at once sensuous and forbidding -
evoking the myths of Narcissus, Maui and Hine nui Te Po.
Water has been a prominent feature of Rakena's work and it
surfaces again here poetically providing an amniotic medium
for love and culture. Rachael Rakena, who has a Master of
Fine Arts (Distinction) and is a lecturer at Toioho ki
Apiti, School of Maori Studies, Massey University, has
coined the term Toi Rerehiko as a means of describing and
locating her practice. Toi Rerehiko, which plays on rorohiko
the Maori word for computer, is a digital media art form
immersed in Maori tikanga (customs) and values. A short
clip from one of the videos may be viewed at: >
ends
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