NiaVal Ngaro
This Woman’s Work is a Woman’s Worth
February 15 – March 25
Installation/Glass Sculpture
Opening February 15, 6pm presented in association with Tinpot Hut WineryĀ and CITC Liquor.
Speakers
His Excellency, The Queens Representative, Hon. Tom Marsters
NiaVal Ngaro, Artist
Blondie Short, Bergman Gallery
13 years ago, NiaVal Ngaro thought of creatingĀ glass sculptures inspired by a root crop that defines Polynesians and her very own people āCook Islanders.
Born in New Zealand to Cook Islands parents, the Auckland artist finally managed to realise her dream about a year ago when she started working on the glass taro sculptures.
For over a month starting on Wednesday next week, she will be putting her āharvestā ā a new series of glass taro sculptures ā into an installation at Bergman Gallery.
The exhibition, This Woman’s Work is a Womanās Worth Ā will run through to March 25.
Of both northern and southern Cook Islands heritage, Ngaro connects strongly with a cultural idiosyncrasy specific to the Island of Pukapuka, where only woman cultivate this essential Polynesian dietary staple. The glass sculptures themselves are shaped for the plant that they represent, showing specific stages of growth, characterised by colour and form. Publicity accompanying the announcement of the exhibition says the installation and accompanying soundtrack earth the artistic premise, the taro and its female cultivators forming a symbiotic partnership that nurtures an entire culture.
A Bergman Gallery spokesman said in a statement that through Ngaroās use of glass, the artist captured the raw form and unusual beauty of this natural Polynesian food staple, while also recognising the taroās paradisiacal surroundings that were saturated in colour and light. An Eden-like purity radiates from the sculpture. The taro is a food source, a cultural metaphor, a symbol of what has come before and a vessel for what has yet to come. The taro is an anchor stone, omnipresent in the artistās Avaiki.
In an interview with CI News, Ngaro said she initially created 15 sculptures and after seeing how much interest they generated from the art lovers here and abroad, she was inspired to do more. She said making glass sculptures is no easy feat, let alone those inspired by taro ā a unique concept in the glass sculpting industry. āThe research takes about nine months. I have to do my homework and then take the concept to the studio for production.”
āWe are dealing with glass; itās a very delicate material. You have to be very precise when doing it because the glass is very, very hot. Itās very temperamental too. Sometimes the blues doesnāt like the brown, it fuses and changes.” You donāt know what colour is going to come out. You donāt know whether it will survive. So itās kind of like a cake, it can go flat or you wait for the right timing to pull it out and its perfect.ā Ngaro said while glass sculpting was rare in New Zealand, glass taro sculpture was one of its kind.āNew Zealand is very different. They make vases, bowls, cups but not glass taro sculptures. Itās something that I was inspired to do and I hope to build on this dream.ā
āTaro is about survival. It is about our ancestorsā connection to their land, the cultural heritage and the natural elements surrounding us. Technology and the world is going so fast and we are losing this connection with our heritage. We just need to stop and learn from the generation that has been there for so long. They will be soon gone and we will have no idea about our heritage. If you get so caught up with this technology and todayās world, you will be disconnected from your cultural heritage and eventually your family.”
āMy sculptures are a tribute to breaching that gap that todayās generation have with their ancestors. Itās about who we are.ā Ngaro plans to assemble a series of documents on taro and its relevance to the people which she wants to showcase together with her art.āThis will help people understand better what my sculptures mean and what taro means to us Cook Islanders.ā
The exhibition on Wednesday will be accompanied by a presentation of Syrah, Pinot Gris and Sauvignon Blanc wines by Tinpot Hut, courtesy of CITC Liquor. It will start at 6pm. The Bergman Gallery exhibition programme is supported by Air New Zealand, CITC Liquor, Bank South Pacific (BSP), Palm Grove, TOA PETROLEUM and Turama Photography
Rashneel Kumar/Bergman Gallery press release for Cook Islands News.
All photos by Julian Zeman, Turama Photography.
http://www.radionz.co.nz/international/programmes/datelinepacific/audio/201834936/cook-island-taro-showcased-in-art-exhibition
http://www.radionz.co.nz/international/pacific-news/325409/beauty-of-taro-showcased-in-cook-islands-exhibition



































