Urban Culture, Urban Art, Urban Identity
Urban Culture, Urban Art, Urban Identity
City Gallery Wellington announces Urban Kainga in the Deane Gallery Young, male and urban –the three elements that connect artists Reweti Arapere, Terry Koloamatangi Klavenes, Nick McFarlane and Siliga David Setoga, who explore identity, culture and urban society in City Gallery Wellington’s new exhibition Urban Kainga, which runs 16 January to 28 March 2010.
Curator Reuben Friend says that while there are similarities in background and area of focus, the four artists explore these themes in very different ways. “Urban Kainga presents four male artists from the South Pacific who were raised in and around New Zealand’s working class communities, where traditional culture and custom collided with economic hardship. Their art echoes the economic and cultural setting of this suburban environment, and tells the tale of transplanted cultures and the process of building identity under the pressures of urban life.”
Terry Koloamatangi Klavenes’ photography documents his kainga, his family and community. His art presents a personal history, yet it is a story shared by many men of his generation. Through his photography Klavenes investigates the ways in which his cultural heritage and this suburban environment have shaped his identity.
Artist Nick McFarlane grew up near Porirua in Wellington, a community where gang members had a strong presence during the 1980's. As a child of Pakeha descent growing up around these kinds of urban tribes, McFarlane observed that the gangs were a side-effect of greater social problems. His reworked gang patches describe some of the conditions in which gangs thrive.
Rewete Arapere (Ngāti Raukawa, Tuwharetoa) comes from the new generation of Māori who have gone through Kōhanga Reo, Kura Kaupapa Māori, and tertiary level Māori studies. This generation are confident in expressing themselves ethnically as Māori, as well as successfully navigating contemporary metropolitan culture. Arapere’s work combines traditional poupou (ancestral figures), and street style graffiti stencils.
Siliga David Setoga’s art looks at the impact of mass marketing and the media on his community and identity. His art reworks globally recognised brands, often revealing insidious messages concealed beneath the attractive packaging. In doing so he playfully addresses serious issues facing Pacific Island communities, such as the predatory nature of some finance companies, and the unhealthy influence of fast food advertising.
The Deane Gallery is one of City Gallery Wellington’s new exhibition spaceswhich is dedicated to exhibiting art focussed on issues of particular interest to Māori and Pacific audiences. Urban Kainga is the first group exhibition in the new gallery, following the success of the opening solo exhibition by Ngaahina Hohaia.
Entry charges apply until 7 February, with free entry for the remainder of the season.
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