ART WORKSHOP

I am a self taught art maker.  I started drawing when I was nine and went to an art school for kids set up by art educator, Gordon Tovey at King Edward Technical College in Dunedin (1956).  Art making continued informally into adult life alongside songwriting, recording and live performance.   
 
In the time of the Settlement of Ngai Tahu  with the Crown, the arts were seen as way to move the tribe forward and away from grievance.    I facilitated events featuring the work and thinking  of Ngai Tahu artists across performing, visual and language arts disciplines & after four dynamic years, change was on my horizon.   I was interested in the application of the arts as a tool to build and strengthen skill amongst people groups and communities where there was less opportunity for creative development.

 Between 2003 and 2009 I trialled arts programmes as a tool amongst prisoners in Canterbury Prisons. The idea was to use the arts as a way to think about vision and goals for their future and the challenges that stopped progress of those goals.    I made art alongside men, women and youth, and took small collections of work to public audiences outside the wire.  There were a number of smaller and some large scale works and events developed  over a period of 6 years including the Ruia Prison Arts Fund Raising exhibition (see Prison Art pages).

I received an Arts Access Aotearoa National Award for Arts Services to Prisoners in 2007.  On the back of that I joined two other writers to develop a National Prison Art Strategy for Arts Access Aotearoa and the Department of Corrections Wellington (2008-2012).  That work was commissioned in the global economic downturn of 2008 - 2009,  the new John Key government  and a complex restructuring of government departments including NZ prisons.  This meant the strategy would be developed against a background of deconstruction.    

 In this period I met with The Learning Connexion who were delivering NZQA programmes to prisoner populations across New Zealand.  I was offered a series of scholarships between 2010 and 2015 that would familiarise me with their entire curriculum, activate a formal arts practice and introduce me to an understanding of materiality;  the use of art making materials that would built the narrative of work. (See Arts Workshop).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Measuring lines

26 June 2012Measuring lines is the theme I'll explore in a number of ways,  throughout the coming year.   The idea was prompted by both a dream and a biblical reference in Zechariah 2. These small working notes (acrylic paint & oil stick on builder's paper) make reference to perceptible lines in the land,  sea and sky and the less perceptible measuring lines in human soul and spirit - the unseen landscape within.   The measuring lines in these works, mark, define, set apart and penetrate surface beliefs. While there appears to be a sense of undisturbed order in these works,  there must also be in future works,  a sense of a shift, of displacement, of discord,  as old thinking makes way for new.   

Contact

Moana Tipa: info@moanatipa.com