Then and There, Here and Now: Portraits of Samoa offers a look at historical and contemporary photographic portraits of Samoans, created by both New Zealand and Samoan photographers over a period of 150 years. Featuring works by Thomas Andrew, Alfred James Tattersall, Glenn Jowitt, Mark Adams, Yuki Kihara, Greg Semu, Edith Amituanai and Genevieve Pini, his exhibition engages with the ideas of the muagagana (Samoan saying) “e sui faiga ae tumau faavae,” which means that even if practices, methods, and approaches in our everyday lives change, the foundations stay the same. The photographs will emphasise the change and continuation of traditional values over time and space, by exploring how Samoan photographers in New Zealand present themselves and their communities today, as opposed to those presentations created by earlier non-Samoan photographers. By focusing on Samoan heritage relating to dress, tatau (tattooing), gender, the home, community, and nature, these works create a narrative that helps to link diaspora communities here in New Zealand back to communities in Samoa from the past and in the present.
Curated by Dr Annika Sippel
Read a blog post by the curator: Sāmoan Portraits Exhibition Annika Sung - IndiGen - LMU Munich