SaVAge K’lub (Auckland)

Kolonial Karma: Late at the Museum

Friday 14 October 2022, 7.30pm10.30pm

Chamberlain Square
Birmingham, B3 3DH
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Supported by Creative New Zealand

3 hours

Free

A very special evening with Aotearoa’s SaVAge K’lub. Fierce has been working with the SaVAge K’lub collective for the past twelve months, presenting their exhibition VA TAMATEA which is currently on show in Birmingham Museum. Because of pandemic constraints, the exhibition has been created by the SaVAge K’lub remotely.

We’re delighted to finally welcome the SaVAge K’lub to Birmingham, in person, for the first time as part of Fierce Festival 2022. They’ll be throwing a very special event ‘Kolonial Karma’, after hours at Birmingham Museum. Expect performance art, music, spoken word and more as SaVAge K’lub activate their exhibition and the Edwardian Tea Room space. More details will be revealed nearer the time.

Featuring Head SaVAge Rosanna Raymond and more to be announced.

Sistar S’pacific, aka Rosanna Raymond, is an innovator of the contemporary Pasifika art scene as a long-standing member of the art collective the Pacific Sisters, and the founding member of the SaVĀge K’lub. Raymond has achieved international renown for her performances, installations, body adornment, and spoken word.

Details

Friday 14 October 2022

7.30pm

Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery

SaVAge K’lub (Auckland)

Vā TAMATEA

Saturday 30 April 2022Sunday 13 November 2022

Chamberlain Square
Birmingham, B3 3DH
+ Google Map

Birmingham 2022 Festival Presents
In partnership with Birmingham Museums Trust
Open Monday to Sunday, 10am to 5pm

Free

Molana Sutton, photograph by Pati Solomona Tyrell

James Waititi, photograph by Pati Solomona Tyrell

Rosanna Raymond, photograph by Pati Solomona Tyrell

SaVAge K’lub installation at the 8th Asia Pacific Triennial

New Zealand/Aotearoa artists Rosanna Raymond and Jaimie Waititi present the inaugural Birmingham SaVĀge K’lubroom within Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery. The SaVĀge Kʻlub est. 2010 by Rosanna Raymond, a convergence of moana makers, queer indigenous and savage vessels birthed in the tentacles of the great wheke, separate but collective. Vā is a Samoan word referring to space, defining it as something active, binding people and things together in reciprocal relationships. The vā is ever present, central in the name we call ourselves, SaVĀge, relational in connection with all, unified, sites of origin and movement.

Tamatea, a lunar phase in te ao Māori, inextricably tethered to our moana, shifting us too – currents, waves, motion, energies exchanging in the waxing and waning, reminding us of the complexity of relationships that conflict can converge – a force for change.

Vā TAMATEA is the calm surface above the churning currents that unearth tāonga (treasures) from Birmingham’s Pacific collections. SaVĀge K’lub is interested in the rupture of the Vā that was brought about by the exchange of tāonga during ‘first contact’ between European explorers and Polynesian peoples.

Bringing together tāonga from SaVĀge K’lub members and Birmingham’s collection with contemporary art works, installation and spoken word, the Birmingham SaVĀge K’lubroom presents a lush, earthy and playful space to gather and connect in, activated by a programme of screenings, talks and Mamalu-Dignity, a workshop led by Rosanna Raymond

Generously supported by the Paul Hamlyn Foundation, National Lottery Community Fund, Canada Council for the Arts, High Commission of Canada and Creative New Zealand.

The installation forms part of the Healing Gardens of Bab, presented by Fierce as part of the Birmingham 2022 Festival. Fierce will transform a number of locations in Birmingham city centre with unique installations, art and events for everybody, led by a steering group of 5 future LGBTQIA+ arts leaders based in the West Midlands collaborating with artists from Canada to New Zealand.

 

Artist Biographies

Rosanna Raymond
Sistar S’pacific, aka Rosanna Raymond, is an innovator of the contemporary Pasifika art scene as a long-standing member of the art collective the Pacific Sisters, and the founding member of the SaVĀge K’lub. Raymond has achieved international renown for her performances, installations, body adornment, and spoken word.

Jaimie Waititi
Jaimie (James) Waititi (Te Whānau a Apanui, Te Rarawa, Ngāpuhi) is a interarts, gender fluid artist who works within performance, regalia, lens-based media, image making, sound and installation. Their work explores the environment, racial and cultural politics and the gender and queer spectrum. They are obsessed with tipuna mātauranga (ancient Māori stories) and exploring these narratives through modern methods of storytelling.

Healing Gardens of Bab Funders

Details

Saturday 30 April 2022Sunday 13 November 2022

Industrial Gallery, Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery