Traditional folk group Moon Goose came in and warmed everyones mornings with their beautifuly intricate harmonies and acoustic musicianship. They played two traditional covers and one orginal song, all with deep, strong meanings that hit your core.
Happy Rāmere e hoa mā! E whai ake nei, coming up on the show today with Rosetta and Milly: Travelling Tunes with Dr Kirsten Zemke, and From The Crate with Cam from Soutbound! Plus, your last chance to win tickets to Wheatus and the Exploding Rainbow Orchestra! Whakarongo mai nei!
Playlist
bar talia - bad reputation
Sheep, Dog & Wolf - Epiphanies I & II
Half/Angel - Boat Ramp
CCTV - Dog
Soulwax - Run Free
Teddyyy - Black Kite (deepState Remix)
Ladyhawke - Black, White & Blue
ShunGu - Last Time (feat. Liv.e)
Sentient Mud - Safe St
Tame Impala - Feels Like We Only Go Backwards
Gilbert O'Sullivan - Alone Again (Naturally)
Crowded House - In My Command
CRRDR, L'Miranda - TE GUSTA MI BACHATA
Caru & Micca - JAYWALK
Eden Burns - The Relaxed Man
Amamelia - The Floating Opera
Kutiman - Haraka
The Wombles - Remember You're A Womble
The Bats - Corner Coming Up
Reb Fountain - One Way Trip
DIIV - Under The Sun
Exploding Rainbow Orchestra - Shut Your Mouth (feat. Lucy Suttor from Dick Move)
Maya caught up with Pōneke-based artist Matthew Galloway about his exhibition Watch History on at Sumer Gallery.
And Sofia had a kōrero with Hiria Anderson-Mita (Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāti Apakura, Ngāti Rereahu) about her show PĀ - Te Huarahi ki te Kāinga - Finding My Way Home currently on at Tim Melville Gallery.
Matthew Galloway is a Pōneke based artist known for his research-lead practice in which he navigates his making through this design sensibility, examining the infrastructures within our everyday lives. Producing socially engaged installations that include sculpture, prints, and video work.
His current exhibition Watch History at Sumer continues Galloway's approach to the world through this design landscape. Producing an installation of over 70 engraved iPhone 16 on luxury modular couches, developed during his time at the McCahon House residency earlier this year.
Over 70 iPhones engraved in fragments of text, taken from lines and closed captions from various films and tv shows that the artist watched. Showcasing an unusually fixed screen with a watch history that removes itself from all context, media and human. Creating a dynamic, and at times absurd array of text in which the viewer encounters at their own pace and path navigation.
Maya had a chat with Matthew about the show and overall practice.