A1 | Darebin Art Salon 2018. Single-channel High Definition video 16:9, colour, sound, 12 min., 12 sec. Angela Tiatia, Holding On (video still), 2015. Hyung S. KIM, Kim Julja, Dodu Jeju, 2013, digital photograph. oil on linen. This is a still image from my moving-image work Holding On (2015). Single-channel High Definition video 16:9, colour, sound, 12 min., 12 sec. Charwei Tsai. Courtsey of the artist. Circle 2009 Add to Collection. Bottom: Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015 (video still). Angela Tiatia, The Fall (2017). ‘Water’ artist Angela Tiatia is concerned about her environment, her videos in the exhibition explore climate change, sustainability, and ultimately the vulnerability of the communities who live precariously near the ocean. The figures in Angela Tiatia’s monumental photo mural are characters in an epic drama. Underestimating the ferocity and strength of the incoming waves, she struggles to maintain her grasp on the island. Bottom: Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015 (video still). The video work filmed in Tuvalu (one of the most vulnerable of the islands) features Tiatia clinging to a rock with the waves washing over her, the tide rising with each wave. Alan SEKULA and Noël BURCH, The Forgotten Space (still from digital moving image), 2010. Angela Tiatia, “Holding On,” 2015. The work becomes a battle between myself and the ocean, symbolising our collective ‘holding on’. One example of the artist's work engaging with the effects of climate change in the Pacific Ocean. Single-channel High Definition video 16:9, colour, sound, 12 minutes, 12 seconds. Within this time frame, I explore ways in which I can challenge these stereotypes and create new narratives and imagery. Angela Tiatia Study for a self-portrait. Angela Tiatia’s artwork Holding on (2015), which was produced in Tuvalu, for example, is a meditative and absorbing video of waves crashing over her still body and increasingly consuming her. The layered meaning of the term offers a way to reflect on the work of the nine contemporary artists in this exhibition. Tiatia, a Samoan woman, bears witness. One of the first pieces of the exhibition, Holding On (2015) by Angela Tiatia, is a 12:11 minute single-channel HD video filmed on the South Pacific Island, Tuvalu. Filmed on Tuvalu in the South Pacific, one of the most endangered nations currently facing the impacts of climate change, Holding On captures a struggle between the body of the artist and the body of the ocean as the tide gradually comes in. In Holding On, the theatre of the sea plays out a performance of body and nature, of culture and ecology. PHOTO: JOHN LAKE. Courtesy of Alcaston Gallery, Narrm Melbourne. Thumbs. Photo: Angela Tiatia Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015. Credit: Angela Tiatia Tiatia, who grew up in Sydney, Samoa and New Zealand, filmed Holding On around Tuvalu, the tiny low-lying nation built on an archipelago of reefs and atolls. In the video Holding On, shown as part of Water, artist Angela Tiatia puts her body on the line as the tide rises on Tuvalu, in the Pacific. Consuelo Cavaniglia studio visit. 12 minutes, 12 seconds. Excited to announce my new solo exhibition Signifying Landscapes opening on the 6th of November at Sophie Gannon Gallery in Melbourne.. 2017 Finalist, Sir John Sulman Prize, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. These works focus on the island of Tuvalu and help to convey the value of these islands and their people, and to make clear what is being lost through rising sea levels. May 19, 2018. Pictured is ‘Narcissus’ (2019) by Angela Tiatia. Courtesy of the artist and Sullivan+Strumpf, Sydney | Singapore "In these two performance videos, LICK and HOLDING ON , Angela Tiatia collaborates with the rising tides of Tuvalu to invoke the power of the ocean and the presence of her Pacific female body. Discover More > CRAFT LAB+. > HOLDING ON, 2015 Single-channel high definition video 16:9, color, sound 12:12 minutes. PhotoStill from Holding On by Angela Tiatia Supplied: QAGOMA/Angela Tiatia Mon 30 Dec 2019, 6:11 AM AEDT. Final week of the NGV Triennial, an exhibition very much seduced by its own reflection. In another work, simply titled Tuvalu (2016), the tides roll in over roads, backyards, gardens and shops as bystanders watch. ; Parliament’s forecourt mosaic is based on Michael Nelson Jagamara’s Possum and Wallaby Dreaming. From dusk to dawn, the rhythm of their lives … Tiatia intends her work to call attention to culture's interaction with the commodification of body and place brought on by neocolonialism. Holding On is the title Angela Tiatia has given the performance video she created in 2015 on Funafuti, the main atoll of Tuvalu, an archipelago halfway between Australia and Hawai’i. The artist lies uneasily on a cement slab as the surrounding ocean laps and washes over her in rhythmic tidal surges. It's one example of the artist's work engaging with the effects of climate change in the Pacific Ocean. Edition 5 + 2AP. We recognise their continuing connection to land, water and culture. It was such a striking image and full of the wry invention I’ve come to associate with her work. Courtesy of the artist. I have placed myself on a slab of concrete and wait for the rising tide. We acknowledge the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung people who are the Traditional Owners and custodians of this land. This year Tiatia was included in the Harper's Bazaar Visionary Women portfolio and will be speaking at the Harper's Bazaar Visionary Women event panellist discussion. NGV Triennial: Angela Tiatia's Narcissus National Gallery of Victoria • Melbourne. ; Robinson won the Wynne Prize for Creation landscape – earth and sea.Creation is a stunning example of Robinson’s understanding of light. INUNDATION: ART AND CLIMATE CHANGE IN THE PACIFIC January 19 – February 28, 2020 The Art Gallery, University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa Events + Programs (events are free and open to the public) Sunday, January 19 1:30 — 3:00 p.m., Artist talks The exhibition’s signature piece – a photo from Angela Tiatia’s 2015 film Holding On – is a woman surrounded and dwarfed by a rising tide. Discover More > JOHN BROOKS | ARTIST IN RESIDENCE. Thumbs. Like Arsham’s previous bodies of work, they use the form of draped fabric to articulate anonymous figures. ... Angela Tiatia, 'Salt Stone' (2016) and 'Holding On' (2015), installation view, 2016 NSW Visual Arts Fellowship (Emerging), Artspace, Sydney. 25 1963–2015 Add to Collection. One example of the artist's work engaging with the effects of climate change in the Pacific Ocean. The image evokes fear and is a clear allegory for the uncertainty that unchecked climate change holds. 4 min 58 sec. (Still) 16:9, colour, no sound, two-channel high definition video. Holding On is the title Angela Tiatia has given the performance video she created in 2015 on Funafuti, the main atoll of Tuvalu, an archipelago halfway between Australia and Hawai’i. Angela Tiatia performs strength in the waves of change. Tides is the third and final episode in a three part series Salt Water, exploring salty waters in all its forms. The Western Sydney University Sculpture Award & Exhibition has been postponed until 2021 due to COVID-19, but the finalists have been announced. Single-channel High Definition video 16:9, colour, sound, 12 minutes, 12 seconds. This exhibition features recent paintings that explore the contemporary Australian physical and cultural landscape through symbols and signifiers set against seductively bright backgrounds. Jaimey Hamilton Faris, Curator Angela Tiatia, Holding On 2015 courtesy of the artist and Sullivan + Strumpf, Sydney I Singapore We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of the place now called Victoria, and all First Peoples living and working on this land. 12 minutes 12 seconds. Part of a PST research project being undertaken at the Orange County Museum of Art. In the video Holding On, shown as part of Water, artist Angela Tiatia puts her body on the line as the tide rises on Tuvalu, in the Pacific. Angela Tiatia Tiatia, who grew up in Sydney, Samoa and New Zealand, filmed Holding On around Tuvalu, the tiny low-lying nation built on an archipelago of reefs and atolls. The refere… Holding On captures the […] 3 / 13 This exhibit will run from January 19–February 28, 2020. ANGELA TIATIA | HOLDING ON. September 20, 2018. Artist Angela Tiatia Holds On in Tuvalu’s Tides Auckland-born, Sydney-based artist Angela Tiatia, who was a finalist in the 2018 Archibald Prize, is a person of movement, of restless tides. MyCity MyCity is the place to make your own. by Richard Chang Feb. 17, 2021 A still from "Holding On," a 2015 single-channel, high definition video by Angela Tiatia. Cai Guo-Qiang. Oceania Rising: Climate Change in Our Region is an exciting 6-month program of art installations, discussions, workshops, and meetings with museum collections – designed to work through big questions around climate change. Julian Charrière’s huge photograph blasting a glacier with a blowtorch in the gallery foyer The Blue Fossil Entropic Stories I (2013) (pictured top), or Angela Tiatia’s video Holding on (2015), which demonstrates the impact of rising water as it laps across the … September 20, 2018. Photo: Zan Wimberley. ' '' ''' - -- --- ---- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of the place now called Victoria, and all First Peoples living and working on this land. Other artists include Angela Tiatia whose video work Holding On addresses the impact of climate change on the Pacific islands as they face rising sea levels. Listen to this episode from Canvas: Unframing Art & Ideas on Spotify. Brisbane's premier lifestyle weekly magazine, featuring the people who make this city great, plus stories about entertainment, arts, food, events, architecture and real estate. Image Credit: Angela Tiatia, Holding On (Still), 2015, Courtesy of Alcaston Gallery, Narrm Melbourne, Australia < BACK TO LISTINGS; Support Us. www.brisbanenews.com.au But it’s not without reason. 19 December 2020—18 April 2021 ... ‘Lick’ and ‘Holding On’, ‘Narcissus’ is a performative, political, activist work telling the world climate change is here. Watch the installation of artist Angela Tiatia’s photo mural The golden hour 2020 as part of Archie Plus at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. Commissioned by the Australian War Memorial. Oceania Rising: Climate Change in Our Region is an exciting 6-month program of art installations, discussions, workshops, and meetings with museum collections – designed to work through big questions around climate change. These works focus on the island of Tuvalu and help to convey the value of these islands and their people, and to make clear what is being lost through rising sea levels. Walk across a vast, rocky, indoor riverbed created by Olafur Eliasson. Vea Mafile'o, Over the Line (still), 2016. In another work, simply titled Tuvalu (2016), the tides roll in over roads, backyards, gardens and shops as bystanders watch. Part of a PST research project being undertaken at the Orange County Museum of Art. Congratulations to: Mark Booth, Jennifer Cochrane, Chris Edwards, Harrie Fasher, John Fitzmaurice, Jim Flook, Martin George, Akira Kamada, … This Saturday— join us for a discussion on the ways internet communication shapes and distorts our civic discourse with York Chang, Nima Shirazi, and Ramesh Srinivasan. Be part of something extraordinary. Angela Tiatia filmed “Holding On” in 2015 on Tuvalu in the South Pacific. Works of art include: 1. paintings, drawings, prints, sculptures and ceramics 2. other physical artworks such as street and neon sign art 3. ephemeral and performance artwork 4. antiquities – objects from ancient times such as coins and pottery 5. posters, maps, clip art, photographs and cartoons 6. digital art – art created using technology such as video, computer or laser beam. Brisbane's premier lifestyle weekly magazine, featuring the people who make this city great, plus stories about entertainment, arts, food, events, architecture and real estate. Art Monthly Australasia is Australasia’s flagship visual arts publication, providing a critical platform for its artists. Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015, still from digital moving image, single-channel HD video, 169, colour, sound. Courtesy the artist and Darren Knight Gallery. Margaret Olley’s Portrait in the mirror is one of her notable works.Portrait is usually included in retrospectives of Olley’s work. Courtesy the artist and Sullivan + Strumpf, Sydney. ... She takes you along with her, both live and in video performances like Holding On, where her floating body is engulfed by waves off Tuvalu, a Pacific island likely to be submerged by rising sea levels. Art Almanac March 2020 $6 Abdul Abdullah Water … Art Monthly Australasia is Australasia’s flagship visual arts publication, providing a critical platform for its artists. Sydney; Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015. The artist lies uneasily on a cement slab as the surrounding ocean laps and washes over her in rhythmic tidal surges. Angela Tiatia. In Tides we chat with Angela Tiatia as she unpack her video and performance work H… (Supplied: QAGOMA/Angela Tiatia) Sign up for our newsletters to stay up to date with events and exhibitions. Other works such as the video Holding On (2015) by Samoan-born Angela Tiatia have grown in urgency as the peoples of the South Pacific are already feeling the impacts of rising sea levels. Discover More > THE STORY OF BUNDOORA HOMESTEAD. 2018 The 40th Alice Art Prize National Art Award Finalist, Alice Springs Art Foundation, Australia . Single-channel High Definition video 16:9, colour, sound . This is Angela Tiatia’s first time in the Archibald Prize though she was a finalist in last year’s Sulman Prize with a self-portrait and is the guest judge of this year’s Sulman. Courtesy the artist and Sullivan+Strumpf, Sydney. June 20, 2018. Angela Tiatia, Holding On (still), 2015. Works; Holding On 2015. Cigdem Aydemir studio visit. Diving into discussions and artworks about rising tides, ecologies, power and climate justice in Tides. 5. Dalton says: ‘I first became aware of Angela from her beautiful self-portrait in the 2018 Archibald Prize. Holding On 2015 Add to Collection. Courtesy of the artist and Sullivan+Strumpf, Sydney and Singapore. Megan Cope. 198.0 x 144.5 cm. August 4, 2018. Water is one of the vital elements that ties life on the planet together. Public Description: HOLDING ON, 2015 is a performance piece which captures a struggle between the body of the artist and the body of the ocean as the tide gradually comes in. 865773: HARRIS, William Branston: 31 January 1986: SA: Shot while tackling armed offender 1135647: HARRISON, Alexander John: 6 August 2001: WA: Wembley: 865721 THIS TIME OF USEFUL CONSCIOUSNESS—POLITICAL ECOLOGY NOW, INSTALLATION VIEW. One example of the artist's work engaging with the effects of climate change in the Pacific Ocean. Browse Pages. In Tides we chat with Angela Tiatia as she unpack her video and performance work Holding On. • Courtesy @angelatiatia and @sullivanstrumpf in Sydney and Singapore 2018 Finalist, Archibald Prize, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. The floor is the problem: it’s covered in rocks the size of your fist or larger, that shift and roll underfoot — and it’s on an incline. The work shows the artist lying prostrate on a … However, INUNDATION isn’t just a reflection of humanity’s climate change anxiety. Filmed on Tuvalu in the South Pacific, one of the most endangered nations currently facing the impacts of climate change, Holding On captures a struggle between the body of the artist and the body of the ocean as the tide gradually comes in. You might need to reference works of art for exhibitions and programs or when using decorative images in digital content. The artist lies on a concrete slab which stretches out into the ocean; a man-made island. The stage on which their story unfolds is a fictive landscape; part hyperreal dreamscape, part secluded coast. Holding On 2015. single-channel high definition video. Tiatia’s video speaks of the constant and unrelenting faith required of the people of the Pacific whose islands and homes are … Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015, still from digital moving image, single-channel HD video, 169, colour, sound. Angela Tiatia, Walking The Wall, 2014, courtesy of Alcaston Gallery, Melbourne. Tiatia’s performance was filmed on the main atoll of the tiny, low-lying island nation of Tuvulu. NUNDATION refers to both the watery disasters of climate change and the overwhelming emotions they evoke. Bands, Businesses, Restaurants, Brands and Celebrities can create Pages in order to connect with their fans and customers on Facebook. HARRIS, Moomooga Tiatia: 17 August 2009: VIC: Sydenham During the early hours of the morning of 2 May 2007, Mr Harris detained an armed offender at a hotel in Taylors Lakes, Victoria. This is "ANGELA TIATIA | Narcissus" by Sullivan + Strumpf on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who love them. COURTESY OF THE DOWSE ART MUSEUM. Angela Tiatia studio visit. Cloud Canyons No. Gaze at Peter Fischli and David Weiss’s snowman, frozen despite Brisbane’s summer heat. Discover More > LINDY DE WIJN | CONNECTION. Video works by Angela Tiatia – Tuvalu, Holding on and Salt Stone – will continue for the duration of the exhibition (27 October 2018). At the invitation of these artists, we can engage in our complex emotional responses to climate change—not just overwhelming frustration, sadness, and anger, but also active hope and connection. Still from Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015, single-channel HD video, 12:12, included in This Time of Useful Consciousness, The Dowse Art Museum, 2017. In the video Holding On, shown as part of Water, artist Angela Tiatia puts her body on the line as the tide rises on Tuvalu, in the Pacific. Angela TIATIA, Holding On (still from digital moving image) 2015, 12:12 mins, single-channel High Definition video, 16:9, colour, sound. Angela Tiatia is a multimedia artist who lives in Sydney and is of Samoan-Australian heritage. The figures are holding the same poses found in the original paintings, but appear draped in a white cloth. We hear Anja Kanngieser’s interactive audio walk, Submersion, as it reflected on sea levels rising, islands submerging and oceans flowing. Share Email Facebook Twitter. Image courtesy of We celebrate the history and contemporary creativity of the world’s oldest living culture and pay respect to Elders — past, present and future. Angela Tiatia is a multimedia artist who lives in Sydney and is of Samoan-Australian heritage. David Medalla. "Inundation" refers to both the watery disasters of climate change and the overwhelming emotions they evoke. Humans of the Islands - Angela Tiatia With Samoan and Australian heritage, NZ-born Angela Tiatia is an award winning Multimedia artist. This exhibition, curated by Jaimey Hamilton Faris, Associate Professor at the Department of Art and Art History at the University of Hawai‘i at Manoa, features work by Mary Babcock, Kaili Chun, DAKOgamay, James Jack, Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner, Joy Lehuanani Enomoto, Charles Lim, and Angela … Tiatia's work explores contemporary culture, with particular attention paid to that culture's interactions with gender, race, and neocolonialism. Tiatia's work has frequently been singled out on a national and international stage. One of her most recent installations, The Fall (2017), was met with widespread acclaim and critical recognition. Angela Tiatia (born November 21, 1973) is a New Zealand-Australian artist. She works with paint, sculpture, video installation, and performance art. Tiatia's work explores contemporary culture, with particular attention paid to that culture's interactions with gender, race, and neocolonialism. Heritage 2013 Add to Collection. We acknowledge the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung people who are the Traditional Owners and custodians of this land. Sausage And Egg Mcmuffin Meal,
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A1 | Darebin Art Salon 2018. Single-channel High Definition video 16:9, colour, sound, 12 min., 12 sec. Angela Tiatia, Holding On (video still), 2015. Hyung S. KIM, Kim Julja, Dodu Jeju, 2013, digital photograph. oil on linen. This is a still image from my moving-image work Holding On (2015). Single-channel High Definition video 16:9, colour, sound, 12 min., 12 sec. Charwei Tsai. Courtsey of the artist. Circle 2009 Add to Collection. Bottom: Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015 (video still). Angela Tiatia, The Fall (2017). ‘Water’ artist Angela Tiatia is concerned about her environment, her videos in the exhibition explore climate change, sustainability, and ultimately the vulnerability of the communities who live precariously near the ocean. The figures in Angela Tiatia’s monumental photo mural are characters in an epic drama. Underestimating the ferocity and strength of the incoming waves, she struggles to maintain her grasp on the island. Bottom: Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015 (video still). The video work filmed in Tuvalu (one of the most vulnerable of the islands) features Tiatia clinging to a rock with the waves washing over her, the tide rising with each wave. Alan SEKULA and Noël BURCH, The Forgotten Space (still from digital moving image), 2010. Angela Tiatia, “Holding On,” 2015. The work becomes a battle between myself and the ocean, symbolising our collective ‘holding on’. One example of the artist's work engaging with the effects of climate change in the Pacific Ocean. Single-channel High Definition video 16:9, colour, sound, 12 minutes, 12 seconds. Within this time frame, I explore ways in which I can challenge these stereotypes and create new narratives and imagery. Angela Tiatia Study for a self-portrait. Angela Tiatia’s artwork Holding on (2015), which was produced in Tuvalu, for example, is a meditative and absorbing video of waves crashing over her still body and increasingly consuming her. The layered meaning of the term offers a way to reflect on the work of the nine contemporary artists in this exhibition. Tiatia, a Samoan woman, bears witness. One of the first pieces of the exhibition, Holding On (2015) by Angela Tiatia, is a 12:11 minute single-channel HD video filmed on the South Pacific Island, Tuvalu. Filmed on Tuvalu in the South Pacific, one of the most endangered nations currently facing the impacts of climate change, Holding On captures a struggle between the body of the artist and the body of the ocean as the tide gradually comes in. In Holding On, the theatre of the sea plays out a performance of body and nature, of culture and ecology. PHOTO: JOHN LAKE. Courtesy of Alcaston Gallery, Narrm Melbourne. Thumbs. Photo: Angela Tiatia Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015. Credit: Angela Tiatia Tiatia, who grew up in Sydney, Samoa and New Zealand, filmed Holding On around Tuvalu, the tiny low-lying nation built on an archipelago of reefs and atolls. In the video Holding On, shown as part of Water, artist Angela Tiatia puts her body on the line as the tide rises on Tuvalu, in the Pacific. Consuelo Cavaniglia studio visit. 12 minutes, 12 seconds. Excited to announce my new solo exhibition Signifying Landscapes opening on the 6th of November at Sophie Gannon Gallery in Melbourne.. 2017 Finalist, Sir John Sulman Prize, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. These works focus on the island of Tuvalu and help to convey the value of these islands and their people, and to make clear what is being lost through rising sea levels. May 19, 2018. Pictured is ‘Narcissus’ (2019) by Angela Tiatia. Courtesy of the artist and Sullivan+Strumpf, Sydney | Singapore "In these two performance videos, LICK and HOLDING ON , Angela Tiatia collaborates with the rising tides of Tuvalu to invoke the power of the ocean and the presence of her Pacific female body. Discover More > CRAFT LAB+. > HOLDING ON, 2015 Single-channel high definition video 16:9, color, sound 12:12 minutes. PhotoStill from Holding On by Angela Tiatia Supplied: QAGOMA/Angela Tiatia Mon 30 Dec 2019, 6:11 AM AEDT. Final week of the NGV Triennial, an exhibition very much seduced by its own reflection. In another work, simply titled Tuvalu (2016), the tides roll in over roads, backyards, gardens and shops as bystanders watch. ; Parliament’s forecourt mosaic is based on Michael Nelson Jagamara’s Possum and Wallaby Dreaming. From dusk to dawn, the rhythm of their lives … Tiatia intends her work to call attention to culture's interaction with the commodification of body and place brought on by neocolonialism. Holding On is the title Angela Tiatia has given the performance video she created in 2015 on Funafuti, the main atoll of Tuvalu, an archipelago halfway between Australia and Hawai’i. The artist lies uneasily on a cement slab as the surrounding ocean laps and washes over her in rhythmic tidal surges. It's one example of the artist's work engaging with the effects of climate change in the Pacific Ocean. Edition 5 + 2AP. We recognise their continuing connection to land, water and culture. It was such a striking image and full of the wry invention I’ve come to associate with her work. Courtesy of the artist. I have placed myself on a slab of concrete and wait for the rising tide. We acknowledge the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung people who are the Traditional Owners and custodians of this land. This year Tiatia was included in the Harper's Bazaar Visionary Women portfolio and will be speaking at the Harper's Bazaar Visionary Women event panellist discussion. NGV Triennial: Angela Tiatia's Narcissus National Gallery of Victoria • Melbourne. ; Robinson won the Wynne Prize for Creation landscape – earth and sea.Creation is a stunning example of Robinson’s understanding of light. INUNDATION: ART AND CLIMATE CHANGE IN THE PACIFIC January 19 – February 28, 2020 The Art Gallery, University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa Events + Programs (events are free and open to the public) Sunday, January 19 1:30 — 3:00 p.m., Artist talks The exhibition’s signature piece – a photo from Angela Tiatia’s 2015 film Holding On – is a woman surrounded and dwarfed by a rising tide. Discover More > JOHN BROOKS | ARTIST IN RESIDENCE. Thumbs. Like Arsham’s previous bodies of work, they use the form of draped fabric to articulate anonymous figures. ... Angela Tiatia, 'Salt Stone' (2016) and 'Holding On' (2015), installation view, 2016 NSW Visual Arts Fellowship (Emerging), Artspace, Sydney. 25 1963–2015 Add to Collection. One example of the artist's work engaging with the effects of climate change in the Pacific Ocean. The image evokes fear and is a clear allegory for the uncertainty that unchecked climate change holds. 4 min 58 sec. (Still) 16:9, colour, no sound, two-channel high definition video. Holding On is the title Angela Tiatia has given the performance video she created in 2015 on Funafuti, the main atoll of Tuvalu, an archipelago halfway between Australia and Hawai’i. Angela Tiatia performs strength in the waves of change. Tides is the third and final episode in a three part series Salt Water, exploring salty waters in all its forms. The Western Sydney University Sculpture Award & Exhibition has been postponed until 2021 due to COVID-19, but the finalists have been announced. Single-channel High Definition video 16:9, colour, sound, 12 minutes, 12 seconds. This exhibition features recent paintings that explore the contemporary Australian physical and cultural landscape through symbols and signifiers set against seductively bright backgrounds. Jaimey Hamilton Faris, Curator Angela Tiatia, Holding On 2015 courtesy of the artist and Sullivan + Strumpf, Sydney I Singapore We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of the place now called Victoria, and all First Peoples living and working on this land. 12 minutes 12 seconds. Part of a PST research project being undertaken at the Orange County Museum of Art. In the video Holding On, shown as part of Water, artist Angela Tiatia puts her body on the line as the tide rises on Tuvalu, in the Pacific. Angela Tiatia Tiatia, who grew up in Sydney, Samoa and New Zealand, filmed Holding On around Tuvalu, the tiny low-lying nation built on an archipelago of reefs and atolls. The refere… Holding On captures the […] 3 / 13 This exhibit will run from January 19–February 28, 2020. ANGELA TIATIA | HOLDING ON. September 20, 2018. Artist Angela Tiatia Holds On in Tuvalu’s Tides Auckland-born, Sydney-based artist Angela Tiatia, who was a finalist in the 2018 Archibald Prize, is a person of movement, of restless tides. MyCity MyCity is the place to make your own. by Richard Chang Feb. 17, 2021 A still from "Holding On," a 2015 single-channel, high definition video by Angela Tiatia. Cai Guo-Qiang. Oceania Rising: Climate Change in Our Region is an exciting 6-month program of art installations, discussions, workshops, and meetings with museum collections – designed to work through big questions around climate change. Julian Charrière’s huge photograph blasting a glacier with a blowtorch in the gallery foyer The Blue Fossil Entropic Stories I (2013) (pictured top), or Angela Tiatia’s video Holding on (2015), which demonstrates the impact of rising water as it laps across the … September 20, 2018. Photo: Zan Wimberley. ' '' ''' - -- --- ---- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of the place now called Victoria, and all First Peoples living and working on this land. Other artists include Angela Tiatia whose video work Holding On addresses the impact of climate change on the Pacific islands as they face rising sea levels. Listen to this episode from Canvas: Unframing Art & Ideas on Spotify. Brisbane's premier lifestyle weekly magazine, featuring the people who make this city great, plus stories about entertainment, arts, food, events, architecture and real estate. Image Credit: Angela Tiatia, Holding On (Still), 2015, Courtesy of Alcaston Gallery, Narrm Melbourne, Australia < BACK TO LISTINGS; Support Us. www.brisbanenews.com.au But it’s not without reason. 19 December 2020—18 April 2021 ... ‘Lick’ and ‘Holding On’, ‘Narcissus’ is a performative, political, activist work telling the world climate change is here. Watch the installation of artist Angela Tiatia’s photo mural The golden hour 2020 as part of Archie Plus at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. Commissioned by the Australian War Memorial. Oceania Rising: Climate Change in Our Region is an exciting 6-month program of art installations, discussions, workshops, and meetings with museum collections – designed to work through big questions around climate change. These works focus on the island of Tuvalu and help to convey the value of these islands and their people, and to make clear what is being lost through rising sea levels. Walk across a vast, rocky, indoor riverbed created by Olafur Eliasson. Vea Mafile'o, Over the Line (still), 2016. In another work, simply titled Tuvalu (2016), the tides roll in over roads, backyards, gardens and shops as bystanders watch. Part of a PST research project being undertaken at the Orange County Museum of Art. Congratulations to: Mark Booth, Jennifer Cochrane, Chris Edwards, Harrie Fasher, John Fitzmaurice, Jim Flook, Martin George, Akira Kamada, … This Saturday— join us for a discussion on the ways internet communication shapes and distorts our civic discourse with York Chang, Nima Shirazi, and Ramesh Srinivasan. Be part of something extraordinary. Angela Tiatia filmed “Holding On” in 2015 on Tuvalu in the South Pacific. Works of art include: 1. paintings, drawings, prints, sculptures and ceramics 2. other physical artworks such as street and neon sign art 3. ephemeral and performance artwork 4. antiquities – objects from ancient times such as coins and pottery 5. posters, maps, clip art, photographs and cartoons 6. digital art – art created using technology such as video, computer or laser beam. Brisbane's premier lifestyle weekly magazine, featuring the people who make this city great, plus stories about entertainment, arts, food, events, architecture and real estate. Art Monthly Australasia is Australasia’s flagship visual arts publication, providing a critical platform for its artists. Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015, still from digital moving image, single-channel HD video, 169, colour, sound. Courtesy the artist and Darren Knight Gallery. Margaret Olley’s Portrait in the mirror is one of her notable works.Portrait is usually included in retrospectives of Olley’s work. Courtesy the artist and Sullivan + Strumpf, Sydney. ... She takes you along with her, both live and in video performances like Holding On, where her floating body is engulfed by waves off Tuvalu, a Pacific island likely to be submerged by rising sea levels. Art Almanac March 2020 $6 Abdul Abdullah Water … Art Monthly Australasia is Australasia’s flagship visual arts publication, providing a critical platform for its artists. Sydney; Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015. The artist lies uneasily on a cement slab as the surrounding ocean laps and washes over her in rhythmic tidal surges. Angela Tiatia. In Tides we chat with Angela Tiatia as she unpack her video and performance work H… (Supplied: QAGOMA/Angela Tiatia) Sign up for our newsletters to stay up to date with events and exhibitions. Other works such as the video Holding On (2015) by Samoan-born Angela Tiatia have grown in urgency as the peoples of the South Pacific are already feeling the impacts of rising sea levels. Discover More > THE STORY OF BUNDOORA HOMESTEAD. 2018 The 40th Alice Art Prize National Art Award Finalist, Alice Springs Art Foundation, Australia . Single-channel High Definition video 16:9, colour, sound . This is Angela Tiatia’s first time in the Archibald Prize though she was a finalist in last year’s Sulman Prize with a self-portrait and is the guest judge of this year’s Sulman. Courtesy the artist and Sullivan+Strumpf, Sydney. June 20, 2018. Angela Tiatia, Holding On (still), 2015. Works; Holding On 2015. Cigdem Aydemir studio visit. Diving into discussions and artworks about rising tides, ecologies, power and climate justice in Tides. 5. Dalton says: ‘I first became aware of Angela from her beautiful self-portrait in the 2018 Archibald Prize. Holding On 2015 Add to Collection. Courtesy of the artist and Sullivan+Strumpf, Sydney and Singapore. Megan Cope. 198.0 x 144.5 cm. August 4, 2018. Water is one of the vital elements that ties life on the planet together. Public Description: HOLDING ON, 2015 is a performance piece which captures a struggle between the body of the artist and the body of the ocean as the tide gradually comes in. 865773: HARRIS, William Branston: 31 January 1986: SA: Shot while tackling armed offender 1135647: HARRISON, Alexander John: 6 August 2001: WA: Wembley: 865721 THIS TIME OF USEFUL CONSCIOUSNESS—POLITICAL ECOLOGY NOW, INSTALLATION VIEW. One example of the artist's work engaging with the effects of climate change in the Pacific Ocean. Browse Pages. In Tides we chat with Angela Tiatia as she unpack her video and performance work Holding On. • Courtesy @angelatiatia and @sullivanstrumpf in Sydney and Singapore 2018 Finalist, Archibald Prize, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. The floor is the problem: it’s covered in rocks the size of your fist or larger, that shift and roll underfoot — and it’s on an incline. The work shows the artist lying prostrate on a … However, INUNDATION isn’t just a reflection of humanity’s climate change anxiety. Filmed on Tuvalu in the South Pacific, one of the most endangered nations currently facing the impacts of climate change, Holding On captures a struggle between the body of the artist and the body of the ocean as the tide gradually comes in. You might need to reference works of art for exhibitions and programs or when using decorative images in digital content. The artist lies on a concrete slab which stretches out into the ocean; a man-made island. The stage on which their story unfolds is a fictive landscape; part hyperreal dreamscape, part secluded coast. Holding On 2015. single-channel high definition video. Tiatia’s video speaks of the constant and unrelenting faith required of the people of the Pacific whose islands and homes are … Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015, still from digital moving image, single-channel HD video, 169, colour, sound. Angela Tiatia, Walking The Wall, 2014, courtesy of Alcaston Gallery, Melbourne. Tiatia’s performance was filmed on the main atoll of the tiny, low-lying island nation of Tuvulu. NUNDATION refers to both the watery disasters of climate change and the overwhelming emotions they evoke. Bands, Businesses, Restaurants, Brands and Celebrities can create Pages in order to connect with their fans and customers on Facebook. HARRIS, Moomooga Tiatia: 17 August 2009: VIC: Sydenham During the early hours of the morning of 2 May 2007, Mr Harris detained an armed offender at a hotel in Taylors Lakes, Victoria. This is "ANGELA TIATIA | Narcissus" by Sullivan + Strumpf on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who love them. COURTESY OF THE DOWSE ART MUSEUM. Angela Tiatia studio visit. Cloud Canyons No. Gaze at Peter Fischli and David Weiss’s snowman, frozen despite Brisbane’s summer heat. Discover More > LINDY DE WIJN | CONNECTION. Video works by Angela Tiatia – Tuvalu, Holding on and Salt Stone – will continue for the duration of the exhibition (27 October 2018). At the invitation of these artists, we can engage in our complex emotional responses to climate change—not just overwhelming frustration, sadness, and anger, but also active hope and connection. Still from Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015, single-channel HD video, 12:12, included in This Time of Useful Consciousness, The Dowse Art Museum, 2017. In the video Holding On, shown as part of Water, artist Angela Tiatia puts her body on the line as the tide rises on Tuvalu, in the Pacific. Angela TIATIA, Holding On (still from digital moving image) 2015, 12:12 mins, single-channel High Definition video, 16:9, colour, sound. Angela Tiatia is a multimedia artist who lives in Sydney and is of Samoan-Australian heritage. The figures are holding the same poses found in the original paintings, but appear draped in a white cloth. We hear Anja Kanngieser’s interactive audio walk, Submersion, as it reflected on sea levels rising, islands submerging and oceans flowing. Share Email Facebook Twitter. Image courtesy of We celebrate the history and contemporary creativity of the world’s oldest living culture and pay respect to Elders — past, present and future. Angela Tiatia is a multimedia artist who lives in Sydney and is of Samoan-Australian heritage. David Medalla. "Inundation" refers to both the watery disasters of climate change and the overwhelming emotions they evoke. Humans of the Islands - Angela Tiatia With Samoan and Australian heritage, NZ-born Angela Tiatia is an award winning Multimedia artist. This exhibition, curated by Jaimey Hamilton Faris, Associate Professor at the Department of Art and Art History at the University of Hawai‘i at Manoa, features work by Mary Babcock, Kaili Chun, DAKOgamay, James Jack, Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner, Joy Lehuanani Enomoto, Charles Lim, and Angela … Tiatia's work explores contemporary culture, with particular attention paid to that culture's interactions with gender, race, and neocolonialism. Tiatia's work has frequently been singled out on a national and international stage. One of her most recent installations, The Fall (2017), was met with widespread acclaim and critical recognition. Angela Tiatia (born November 21, 1973) is a New Zealand-Australian artist. She works with paint, sculpture, video installation, and performance art. Tiatia's work explores contemporary culture, with particular attention paid to that culture's interactions with gender, race, and neocolonialism. Heritage 2013 Add to Collection. 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Her solo show, Holding On, is exhibited at Bundoora Homestead Art Centre in Victoria until 11 November. See animals from around the world gather together to drink from Cai Guo-Qiang’s brilliant blue waterhole. RE FORMATION (Noogoon/St Helena Island) 2019 P.27: Photo: Patricia Mado, Courtesy Forage to Feast, Diego Bonetto and Marnee Fox; Fraser Anderson. Angela Tiatia, "Holding On," 2015 EXHIBITION. Courtesy of Alcaston Gallery, Narrm/Melbourne Courtesy of Alcaston Gallery, Narrm/Melbourne On closer inspection the ‘cloth’ is hollow, merely appearing to drape over a figure that’s no longer contained within. In Tides we chat with Angela Tiatia as she unpack her video and performance work Holding On. HOLDING ON, 2015 is a performance piece which captures a struggle between the body of the artist and the body of the ocean as the tide gradually comes in. ANGELA TIATIA | HOLDING ON. ‘Water’ artist Angela Tiatia is concerned about her environment, her videos in the exhibition explore climate change, sustainability, and ultimately the vulnerability of the communities who live precariously near the ocean. ‘Holding On’ is the title Angela Tiatia has given the performance video she created in 2015 on Funafuti, the main atoll of Tuvalu in the South Pacific. Save favourites and manage your time. Holding On is a performance video Angela Tiatia created in 2015 on Funafuti, the main atoll of Tuvalu, in the South Pacific. Tides is the third and final episode in a three part series Salt Water, exploring salty waters in all its forms. View _FreeCourseWeb.com__ArtAlmanac-March2020.pdf from ART 101 at University of California, Los Angeles. She said in 2018 that her art is meant to examine "how the Pacific body/place/experience has been stereotyped through images/media/popular culture/art over the last 150 years. Courtesy the artist and Alcaston Gallery, Narrm Melbourne. As well as this, I also look at the universality of the human experience and the h… ANGELA TIATIA | HOLDING ON. Courtesy of Alcaston Gallery, Narrm Melbourne. Based in the Pacific, Register now.. it's fast and free. Urged by the celestial swell of the moon, the tide rises as Tiatia clings to a rock, finding grip in earthed resilience, yet … It's one example of the artist's work … The artist lies on a concrete slab which stretches out into the ocean; a man-made island. Diving into discussions and artworks about rising tides, ecologies, power and climate justice in Tides. Other works such as the video Holding On (2015) by Samoan-born Angela Tiatia have grown in urgency as the peoples of the South Pacific are already feeling the impacts of rising sea levels. Newsletter. On view until 18 April. A still from 'Holding On,' a 2015 single-channel, high definition video by Angela Tiatia. ANGELA TIATIA | HOLDING ON September 20, 2018 - November 11, 2018 Filmed on Tuvalu in the South Pacific, one of the most endangered nations currently facing the. James Nguyen studio visit. Artist Angela Tiatia often casts herself in her own works – whether it be sneaker-clad and staring intently in her 2018 Archibald Prize self-portrait, or 2014’s Heels, in which she appeared in black pumps and a Beyoncé-like bodysuit, engaging in the taboo act of exposing a tattoo on her upper thigh. Jonathan Dalton has painted fellow artist Angela Tiatia, a former finalist in the Archibald and Sulman Prizes and former Sulman judge. The work highlights the reality of climate change as Tiatia lays atop a concrete slab during the incoming tide. In this discussion, guests explore our intrinsic human connection to water, and how this connection is highlighted through art.Guests include ‘Water’ artists Vera Möller, Angela Tiatia & Joyce Campbell, and philosopher of science Professor Peter Godfrey-Smith. Featuring Angela Tiatia Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre. We hear Anja Kanngieser’s interactive audio walk, Submersion, as it reflected on sea levels rising, islands submerging and oceans flowing. I’m lurching around a white-walled, fluorescent-lit space in Queensland’s Gallery of Modern Art, trying to maintain my balance. The Pacific Ocean is rich with the history of human passage but is increasingly suffering from pollution, environmental pressures and degradation as the Asia Pacific region continues to grow and expand. Part of a PST research project being undertaken at the Orange County Museum of Art. We celebrate the history and contemporary creativity of the world’s oldest living culture and pay respect to Elders — past, present and future. Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015 (video still). CV on ~ Angela Tiatia ~ 2018 Winner, Ravenswood Australian Women’s Art Award, Australia. We recognise their continuing connection to land, water and culture. Video works by Angela Tiatia – Tuvalu, Holding on and Salt Stone – will continue for the duration of the exhibition (27 October 2018). In Tides we chat with Angela Tiatia as she unpack her video and performance work Holding On. www.brisbanenews.com.au HD video 3 minutes 29 seconds with Sereima Adimate, Tommy Misa, Kiliati Pahulu, Angela Tiatia, garments by Babylikestopony. Tiatia considers her work an opportunity to spark conversation about this issue. In June 2018, Tiatia was awarded the Ravenswood Australian Women's Art Prize, the richest professional art prize for women in Australia. Discover More > A1 | Darebin Art Salon 2018. Single-channel High Definition video 16:9, colour, sound, 12 min., 12 sec. Angela Tiatia, Holding On (video still), 2015. Hyung S. KIM, Kim Julja, Dodu Jeju, 2013, digital photograph. oil on linen. This is a still image from my moving-image work Holding On (2015). Single-channel High Definition video 16:9, colour, sound, 12 min., 12 sec. Charwei Tsai. Courtsey of the artist. Circle 2009 Add to Collection. Bottom: Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015 (video still). Angela Tiatia, The Fall (2017). ‘Water’ artist Angela Tiatia is concerned about her environment, her videos in the exhibition explore climate change, sustainability, and ultimately the vulnerability of the communities who live precariously near the ocean. The figures in Angela Tiatia’s monumental photo mural are characters in an epic drama. Underestimating the ferocity and strength of the incoming waves, she struggles to maintain her grasp on the island. Bottom: Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015 (video still). The video work filmed in Tuvalu (one of the most vulnerable of the islands) features Tiatia clinging to a rock with the waves washing over her, the tide rising with each wave. Alan SEKULA and Noël BURCH, The Forgotten Space (still from digital moving image), 2010. Angela Tiatia, “Holding On,” 2015. The work becomes a battle between myself and the ocean, symbolising our collective ‘holding on’. One example of the artist's work engaging with the effects of climate change in the Pacific Ocean. Single-channel High Definition video 16:9, colour, sound, 12 minutes, 12 seconds. Within this time frame, I explore ways in which I can challenge these stereotypes and create new narratives and imagery. Angela Tiatia Study for a self-portrait. Angela Tiatia’s artwork Holding on (2015), which was produced in Tuvalu, for example, is a meditative and absorbing video of waves crashing over her still body and increasingly consuming her. The layered meaning of the term offers a way to reflect on the work of the nine contemporary artists in this exhibition. Tiatia, a Samoan woman, bears witness. One of the first pieces of the exhibition, Holding On (2015) by Angela Tiatia, is a 12:11 minute single-channel HD video filmed on the South Pacific Island, Tuvalu. Filmed on Tuvalu in the South Pacific, one of the most endangered nations currently facing the impacts of climate change, Holding On captures a struggle between the body of the artist and the body of the ocean as the tide gradually comes in. In Holding On, the theatre of the sea plays out a performance of body and nature, of culture and ecology. PHOTO: JOHN LAKE. Courtesy of Alcaston Gallery, Narrm Melbourne. Thumbs. Photo: Angela Tiatia Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015. Credit: Angela Tiatia Tiatia, who grew up in Sydney, Samoa and New Zealand, filmed Holding On around Tuvalu, the tiny low-lying nation built on an archipelago of reefs and atolls. In the video Holding On, shown as part of Water, artist Angela Tiatia puts her body on the line as the tide rises on Tuvalu, in the Pacific. Consuelo Cavaniglia studio visit. 12 minutes, 12 seconds. Excited to announce my new solo exhibition Signifying Landscapes opening on the 6th of November at Sophie Gannon Gallery in Melbourne.. 2017 Finalist, Sir John Sulman Prize, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. These works focus on the island of Tuvalu and help to convey the value of these islands and their people, and to make clear what is being lost through rising sea levels. May 19, 2018. Pictured is ‘Narcissus’ (2019) by Angela Tiatia. Courtesy of the artist and Sullivan+Strumpf, Sydney | Singapore "In these two performance videos, LICK and HOLDING ON , Angela Tiatia collaborates with the rising tides of Tuvalu to invoke the power of the ocean and the presence of her Pacific female body. Discover More > CRAFT LAB+. > HOLDING ON, 2015 Single-channel high definition video 16:9, color, sound 12:12 minutes. PhotoStill from Holding On by Angela Tiatia Supplied: QAGOMA/Angela Tiatia Mon 30 Dec 2019, 6:11 AM AEDT. Final week of the NGV Triennial, an exhibition very much seduced by its own reflection. In another work, simply titled Tuvalu (2016), the tides roll in over roads, backyards, gardens and shops as bystanders watch. ; Parliament’s forecourt mosaic is based on Michael Nelson Jagamara’s Possum and Wallaby Dreaming. From dusk to dawn, the rhythm of their lives … Tiatia intends her work to call attention to culture's interaction with the commodification of body and place brought on by neocolonialism. Holding On is the title Angela Tiatia has given the performance video she created in 2015 on Funafuti, the main atoll of Tuvalu, an archipelago halfway between Australia and Hawai’i. The artist lies uneasily on a cement slab as the surrounding ocean laps and washes over her in rhythmic tidal surges. It's one example of the artist's work engaging with the effects of climate change in the Pacific Ocean. Edition 5 + 2AP. We recognise their continuing connection to land, water and culture. It was such a striking image and full of the wry invention I’ve come to associate with her work. Courtesy of the artist. I have placed myself on a slab of concrete and wait for the rising tide. We acknowledge the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung people who are the Traditional Owners and custodians of this land. This year Tiatia was included in the Harper's Bazaar Visionary Women portfolio and will be speaking at the Harper's Bazaar Visionary Women event panellist discussion. NGV Triennial: Angela Tiatia's Narcissus National Gallery of Victoria • Melbourne. ; Robinson won the Wynne Prize for Creation landscape – earth and sea.Creation is a stunning example of Robinson’s understanding of light. INUNDATION: ART AND CLIMATE CHANGE IN THE PACIFIC January 19 – February 28, 2020 The Art Gallery, University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa Events + Programs (events are free and open to the public) Sunday, January 19 1:30 — 3:00 p.m., Artist talks The exhibition’s signature piece – a photo from Angela Tiatia’s 2015 film Holding On – is a woman surrounded and dwarfed by a rising tide. Discover More > JOHN BROOKS | ARTIST IN RESIDENCE. Thumbs. Like Arsham’s previous bodies of work, they use the form of draped fabric to articulate anonymous figures. ... Angela Tiatia, 'Salt Stone' (2016) and 'Holding On' (2015), installation view, 2016 NSW Visual Arts Fellowship (Emerging), Artspace, Sydney. 25 1963–2015 Add to Collection. One example of the artist's work engaging with the effects of climate change in the Pacific Ocean. The image evokes fear and is a clear allegory for the uncertainty that unchecked climate change holds. 4 min 58 sec. (Still) 16:9, colour, no sound, two-channel high definition video. Holding On is the title Angela Tiatia has given the performance video she created in 2015 on Funafuti, the main atoll of Tuvalu, an archipelago halfway between Australia and Hawai’i. Angela Tiatia performs strength in the waves of change. Tides is the third and final episode in a three part series Salt Water, exploring salty waters in all its forms. The Western Sydney University Sculpture Award & Exhibition has been postponed until 2021 due to COVID-19, but the finalists have been announced. Single-channel High Definition video 16:9, colour, sound, 12 minutes, 12 seconds. This exhibition features recent paintings that explore the contemporary Australian physical and cultural landscape through symbols and signifiers set against seductively bright backgrounds. Jaimey Hamilton Faris, Curator Angela Tiatia, Holding On 2015 courtesy of the artist and Sullivan + Strumpf, Sydney I Singapore We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of the place now called Victoria, and all First Peoples living and working on this land. 12 minutes 12 seconds. Part of a PST research project being undertaken at the Orange County Museum of Art. In the video Holding On, shown as part of Water, artist Angela Tiatia puts her body on the line as the tide rises on Tuvalu, in the Pacific. Angela Tiatia Tiatia, who grew up in Sydney, Samoa and New Zealand, filmed Holding On around Tuvalu, the tiny low-lying nation built on an archipelago of reefs and atolls. The refere… Holding On captures the […] 3 / 13 This exhibit will run from January 19–February 28, 2020. ANGELA TIATIA | HOLDING ON. September 20, 2018. Artist Angela Tiatia Holds On in Tuvalu’s Tides Auckland-born, Sydney-based artist Angela Tiatia, who was a finalist in the 2018 Archibald Prize, is a person of movement, of restless tides. MyCity MyCity is the place to make your own. by Richard Chang Feb. 17, 2021 A still from "Holding On," a 2015 single-channel, high definition video by Angela Tiatia. Cai Guo-Qiang. Oceania Rising: Climate Change in Our Region is an exciting 6-month program of art installations, discussions, workshops, and meetings with museum collections – designed to work through big questions around climate change. Julian Charrière’s huge photograph blasting a glacier with a blowtorch in the gallery foyer The Blue Fossil Entropic Stories I (2013) (pictured top), or Angela Tiatia’s video Holding on (2015), which demonstrates the impact of rising water as it laps across the … September 20, 2018. Photo: Zan Wimberley. ' '' ''' - -- --- ---- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of the place now called Victoria, and all First Peoples living and working on this land. Other artists include Angela Tiatia whose video work Holding On addresses the impact of climate change on the Pacific islands as they face rising sea levels. Listen to this episode from Canvas: Unframing Art & Ideas on Spotify. Brisbane's premier lifestyle weekly magazine, featuring the people who make this city great, plus stories about entertainment, arts, food, events, architecture and real estate. Image Credit: Angela Tiatia, Holding On (Still), 2015, Courtesy of Alcaston Gallery, Narrm Melbourne, Australia < BACK TO LISTINGS; Support Us. www.brisbanenews.com.au But it’s not without reason. 19 December 2020—18 April 2021 ... ‘Lick’ and ‘Holding On’, ‘Narcissus’ is a performative, political, activist work telling the world climate change is here. Watch the installation of artist Angela Tiatia’s photo mural The golden hour 2020 as part of Archie Plus at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. Commissioned by the Australian War Memorial. Oceania Rising: Climate Change in Our Region is an exciting 6-month program of art installations, discussions, workshops, and meetings with museum collections – designed to work through big questions around climate change. These works focus on the island of Tuvalu and help to convey the value of these islands and their people, and to make clear what is being lost through rising sea levels. Walk across a vast, rocky, indoor riverbed created by Olafur Eliasson. Vea Mafile'o, Over the Line (still), 2016. In another work, simply titled Tuvalu (2016), the tides roll in over roads, backyards, gardens and shops as bystanders watch. Part of a PST research project being undertaken at the Orange County Museum of Art. Congratulations to: Mark Booth, Jennifer Cochrane, Chris Edwards, Harrie Fasher, John Fitzmaurice, Jim Flook, Martin George, Akira Kamada, … This Saturday— join us for a discussion on the ways internet communication shapes and distorts our civic discourse with York Chang, Nima Shirazi, and Ramesh Srinivasan. Be part of something extraordinary. Angela Tiatia filmed “Holding On” in 2015 on Tuvalu in the South Pacific. Works of art include: 1. paintings, drawings, prints, sculptures and ceramics 2. other physical artworks such as street and neon sign art 3. ephemeral and performance artwork 4. antiquities – objects from ancient times such as coins and pottery 5. posters, maps, clip art, photographs and cartoons 6. digital art – art created using technology such as video, computer or laser beam. Brisbane's premier lifestyle weekly magazine, featuring the people who make this city great, plus stories about entertainment, arts, food, events, architecture and real estate. Art Monthly Australasia is Australasia’s flagship visual arts publication, providing a critical platform for its artists. Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015, still from digital moving image, single-channel HD video, 169, colour, sound. Courtesy the artist and Darren Knight Gallery. Margaret Olley’s Portrait in the mirror is one of her notable works.Portrait is usually included in retrospectives of Olley’s work. Courtesy the artist and Sullivan + Strumpf, Sydney. ... She takes you along with her, both live and in video performances like Holding On, where her floating body is engulfed by waves off Tuvalu, a Pacific island likely to be submerged by rising sea levels. Art Almanac March 2020 $6 Abdul Abdullah Water … Art Monthly Australasia is Australasia’s flagship visual arts publication, providing a critical platform for its artists. Sydney; Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015. The artist lies uneasily on a cement slab as the surrounding ocean laps and washes over her in rhythmic tidal surges. Angela Tiatia. In Tides we chat with Angela Tiatia as she unpack her video and performance work H… (Supplied: QAGOMA/Angela Tiatia) Sign up for our newsletters to stay up to date with events and exhibitions. Other works such as the video Holding On (2015) by Samoan-born Angela Tiatia have grown in urgency as the peoples of the South Pacific are already feeling the impacts of rising sea levels. Discover More > THE STORY OF BUNDOORA HOMESTEAD. 2018 The 40th Alice Art Prize National Art Award Finalist, Alice Springs Art Foundation, Australia . Single-channel High Definition video 16:9, colour, sound . This is Angela Tiatia’s first time in the Archibald Prize though she was a finalist in last year’s Sulman Prize with a self-portrait and is the guest judge of this year’s Sulman. Courtesy the artist and Sullivan+Strumpf, Sydney. June 20, 2018. Angela Tiatia, Holding On (still), 2015. Works; Holding On 2015. Cigdem Aydemir studio visit. Diving into discussions and artworks about rising tides, ecologies, power and climate justice in Tides. 5. Dalton says: ‘I first became aware of Angela from her beautiful self-portrait in the 2018 Archibald Prize. Holding On 2015 Add to Collection. Courtesy of the artist and Sullivan+Strumpf, Sydney and Singapore. Megan Cope. 198.0 x 144.5 cm. August 4, 2018. Water is one of the vital elements that ties life on the planet together. Public Description: HOLDING ON, 2015 is a performance piece which captures a struggle between the body of the artist and the body of the ocean as the tide gradually comes in. 865773: HARRIS, William Branston: 31 January 1986: SA: Shot while tackling armed offender 1135647: HARRISON, Alexander John: 6 August 2001: WA: Wembley: 865721 THIS TIME OF USEFUL CONSCIOUSNESS—POLITICAL ECOLOGY NOW, INSTALLATION VIEW. One example of the artist's work engaging with the effects of climate change in the Pacific Ocean. Browse Pages. In Tides we chat with Angela Tiatia as she unpack her video and performance work Holding On. • Courtesy @angelatiatia and @sullivanstrumpf in Sydney and Singapore 2018 Finalist, Archibald Prize, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. The floor is the problem: it’s covered in rocks the size of your fist or larger, that shift and roll underfoot — and it’s on an incline. The work shows the artist lying prostrate on a … However, INUNDATION isn’t just a reflection of humanity’s climate change anxiety. Filmed on Tuvalu in the South Pacific, one of the most endangered nations currently facing the impacts of climate change, Holding On captures a struggle between the body of the artist and the body of the ocean as the tide gradually comes in. You might need to reference works of art for exhibitions and programs or when using decorative images in digital content. The artist lies on a concrete slab which stretches out into the ocean; a man-made island. The stage on which their story unfolds is a fictive landscape; part hyperreal dreamscape, part secluded coast. Holding On 2015. single-channel high definition video. Tiatia’s video speaks of the constant and unrelenting faith required of the people of the Pacific whose islands and homes are … Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015, still from digital moving image, single-channel HD video, 169, colour, sound. Angela Tiatia, Walking The Wall, 2014, courtesy of Alcaston Gallery, Melbourne. Tiatia’s performance was filmed on the main atoll of the tiny, low-lying island nation of Tuvulu. NUNDATION refers to both the watery disasters of climate change and the overwhelming emotions they evoke. Bands, Businesses, Restaurants, Brands and Celebrities can create Pages in order to connect with their fans and customers on Facebook. HARRIS, Moomooga Tiatia: 17 August 2009: VIC: Sydenham During the early hours of the morning of 2 May 2007, Mr Harris detained an armed offender at a hotel in Taylors Lakes, Victoria. This is "ANGELA TIATIA | Narcissus" by Sullivan + Strumpf on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who love them. COURTESY OF THE DOWSE ART MUSEUM. Angela Tiatia studio visit. Cloud Canyons No. Gaze at Peter Fischli and David Weiss’s snowman, frozen despite Brisbane’s summer heat. Discover More > LINDY DE WIJN | CONNECTION. Video works by Angela Tiatia – Tuvalu, Holding on and Salt Stone – will continue for the duration of the exhibition (27 October 2018). At the invitation of these artists, we can engage in our complex emotional responses to climate change—not just overwhelming frustration, sadness, and anger, but also active hope and connection. Still from Angela Tiatia, Holding On, 2015, single-channel HD video, 12:12, included in This Time of Useful Consciousness, The Dowse Art Museum, 2017. In the video Holding On, shown as part of Water, artist Angela Tiatia puts her body on the line as the tide rises on Tuvalu, in the Pacific. Angela TIATIA, Holding On (still from digital moving image) 2015, 12:12 mins, single-channel High Definition video, 16:9, colour, sound. Angela Tiatia is a multimedia artist who lives in Sydney and is of Samoan-Australian heritage. The figures are holding the same poses found in the original paintings, but appear draped in a white cloth. We hear Anja Kanngieser’s interactive audio walk, Submersion, as it reflected on sea levels rising, islands submerging and oceans flowing. Share Email Facebook Twitter. Image courtesy of We celebrate the history and contemporary creativity of the world’s oldest living culture and pay respect to Elders — past, present and future. Angela Tiatia is a multimedia artist who lives in Sydney and is of Samoan-Australian heritage. David Medalla. "Inundation" refers to both the watery disasters of climate change and the overwhelming emotions they evoke. Humans of the Islands - Angela Tiatia With Samoan and Australian heritage, NZ-born Angela Tiatia is an award winning Multimedia artist. This exhibition, curated by Jaimey Hamilton Faris, Associate Professor at the Department of Art and Art History at the University of Hawai‘i at Manoa, features work by Mary Babcock, Kaili Chun, DAKOgamay, James Jack, Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner, Joy Lehuanani Enomoto, Charles Lim, and Angela … Tiatia's work explores contemporary culture, with particular attention paid to that culture's interactions with gender, race, and neocolonialism. Tiatia's work has frequently been singled out on a national and international stage. One of her most recent installations, The Fall (2017), was met with widespread acclaim and critical recognition. Angela Tiatia (born November 21, 1973) is a New Zealand-Australian artist. She works with paint, sculpture, video installation, and performance art. Tiatia's work explores contemporary culture, with particular attention paid to that culture's interactions with gender, race, and neocolonialism. Heritage 2013 Add to Collection. We acknowledge the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung people who are the Traditional Owners and custodians of this land.