Sharjah Art Foundation

Sharjah Biennial 15: Thinking Historically in the Present

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HeTangi Aroha–MamaDon't Cry (2019)

Kahurangiariki Smith
HeTangi Aroha–MamaDon't Cry (still), 2019
Installation view: SharjahBiennial 15, Bait Al Serkal, 2023

Talk Description

SB15 artists Kahurangiariki Smith and Neil Ieremia share their artistic approaches to subverting stereotypical representations of Indigenous peoples. Smith’s practice broadly addresses the history of colonisation, the reclamation of Indigenous knowledge and the present-day, lived consequences of historical events in New Zealand. Ieremia’s dance company, Black Grace, is an Auckland-based dance company that inflects the gestural idiom of contemporary dance with Indigenous Samoan and Māori movement patterns. Both artists employ diverse methods and artistic media to reclaim the discourse around Indigenous identity, heritage and lived experience.

Speakers

Neil Ieremia – Founder and Artistic Director, Black Grace
Kahurangiariki Smith – Artist

Moderator

Nina Tonga- Curator Contemporary Art at Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa

Registration

This discussion will be held at 2:00 pm Gulf Standard Time (GST).
This discussion will take place via Zoom and will be held in English.

To register for the online discussion, please click here

This event is free and open to the public. For more information, please email .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) or call 06 568 5050.

Watch the video here

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Subverting the Gaze: Indigenous Representation in Visual Art and Dance- A Conversation with Kahurangiariki Smith and Neil Ieremia

Smith, Kahurangiariki

The artist believes that within the tension between traditional heritage and digital media, there is vast potential for the transmission of Indigenous voices and experiences.