Tag: ANTI-festival

  • Ocean Space in Venice meets indigenous art

    Ocean Space in Venice meets indigenous art

    During the opening week of the Venice Biennale, there are multiple programs of artist talks and performances taking place. This is also true in the Ocean Space-an art and scholarship incubator that was established in 2011. It has supported artistic production and environmental advocacy, bringing together collaboration and creating knowledge that is often missing in mainstream science.

    In the decade of ocean, while many conservation efforts are taking place across the world’s oceans, it is timely that Biennale in 2024 will have a program around the ocean. Playfully coined in the program’s title “Re-stor(y)ing Oceania“, the new exhibition and performance series in Ocean Space may just do that, restoring and mending broken practices. In a multidisciplinary artistic way, two new site-specific commissions by indigenous artists who come from the Pacific worked with a curator Taloi Havini, who is herself an indigenous artist from the Pacific. The new commissions by artists Latai Taumoepeau and Elisapeta Hinemoa Heta combine performance, sculpture, poetry, and movement. Bougainville-born curator Taloi Havini returns to Ocean Space after her own 2021 solo exhibition there.

    Ocean Space is part of TBA21–Academy, which as an educational branch of TBA21 (Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary) is a center for research initiatives. Ocean Space fosters a deeper relationship with the ocean and waterways, using art to inspire action. The center has been bringing art, science, policy and conservation around the same table.

    TBA21–Academy’s Ocean Space reopened “doors of the Church of San Lorenzo” when inaugurating their home in Venice few years ago. It has become a global incubator presenting and creating action and literacy about the ocean, creating programs and events around different artistic practices, design, architecture and research. Education programs, exhibitions and performances, also open the season of Ocean Space during the 60th Biennale Arte.

    Curator Havini’s vision is guided by an ancestral ‘call-and-response method’. She uses the concept as a vehicle to find solidarity and kinship in times of uncertainty. When exploring knowledge, she is focused on production, transmission, inheritance, mapping, and representation. Havini examines these in relation to land, architecture, and place. “Re-stor(y)ing Oceania” opened in Ocean Space on March 23, 2024, and will be on view through October 13, 2024, during the Venice Biennale.


    Real threats to life call for the need to slow down the clock on extraction and counter this with reverence for life of the Oceans.

    The Pacific Islands are one of the regions most impacted by the damaging effects of climate change. The area has many Indigenous leaders and entire communities who have participated in the call for action on the rising sea levels, and have advocated for the climate emergency that the planet is facing. There is more study of the crisis now, and there is a greater awareness of what is going on in terms of urgency, risk mitigation, and what it means to be vulnerable when it comes to the future of ocean-front communities. The indigenous artists have a voice in this continuum-their perspectives from across Oceania, Australia, and the Asia-Pacific, including the Diaspora, bring exchange and conversation. These voices create the meeting point around which the performances and exhibitions take place.

    The conversations and happenings in Ocean Space include three days of live performances held over the Venice Biennale vernissage week (April 16–20, 2024). These will also remain accessible online after the events. There will be a new archive of stories, including voices from the First Nations artists, curators, writers, community leaders, poets and musicians. Additionally, collaborators include navigators, sailors, fisherfolk and scholars, who will navigate the world’s oceanic spheres, and create further understanding about ocean’s existence.

    For the new commissions, curator Havini invited artist Latai Taumoepeau, who uses faivā (performing art) grounded in Tongan philosophies of relational vā (space) and tā (time). Taumoepeau is 2022 ‘ANTI Festival Live Art’ (Finland) Prize winner.

    Centered in the body, faivā cross-pollinates ancient and everyday temporal practices to make visible the impact of the climate crisis in the Pacific. In the artist’s own words, ‘The more ancient I am, the more contemporary my work is’. The artist’s commission addresses deep-sea mining in a new choral work. Her resistance is shown in a poetic way, using songs that share a power to store histories and carry values and knowledge in Taumoepeau’s homeland of Tonga. The newly commissioned work, Deep Communion sung in minor , “ArchipelaGO, THIS IS NOT A DRILL”, engages audiences in the process of giving Pacific islanders an opportunity to be heard in front of diverse audiences.

    There are sculptural and interactive machines installed in Ocean Space, which provide audiences with opportunities to engage with the Deep Communion sung in minor. Participants can either activate the installation – which will trigger part of the musical score – or take a seat in the surrounding bleachers to witness the performance. The work is being perfomed by local sports teams in live performance events.

    In response to Taumoepeau‘s new solo commission, a live project space has emerged at Ocean Space that was created in collaboration with architect Elisapeta Heta, a Māori, Samoan, and Tokelauan leader and advocate for change. Her imagination has provided Maori and Pasifika perspectives on the importance of place to design and cultural identity, and brought that knowledge to Ocean Space.

    As her response to the exhibition, the architect includes a new installation that uses a multisensory embodiment of ‘The Body of Wainuiātea‘. This title of the work means a ceremony combining ritual and a ceremony guided by the Māori concept of tikanga. She comes from Aotearoa, New Zealand, using the concepts from her ancestral lands alongside those from across the Te Moana-nui-a-kiwa.


    Tikanga is derived from the Māori word ‘tika’, which means ‘right’ or ‘correct’, so to act in accordance with tikanga is to behave in a way that is culturally proper or appropriate.

    The space is welcoming visitors and audiences, as it is also designed for exchange and collaboration. The space is formed around the ancient way of knowing and relating through story, and waiata (song). The goal is to connect to a greater awareness of atua (the gods’) connections to the Ocean. The tapu (sacred) is very much needed by current environmental and scientific campaigns, which seek to protect the life of the planets’ largest bodies of water.

    Hosting guests through various forms of storytelling, is a common practice in the Pacific communities. Heta’s work, The Body of Wainuiātea, is a safe space for a network of artists, curators, writers, community leaders, poets, musicians, as well as ocean-professionals and scholars to come together. Collaborators include Dr Albert Refiti, Hiramarie Moewaka, and Rhonda Tibble.

    The program is commissioned by TBA21–Academy and Artspace, Sydney, and produced in partnership with OGR Torino culture and innovation hub.

    — — —

    Curator Taloi Havini (Nakas Tribe, Hakö people) was born in Arawa, Autonomous Region of Bougainville and is currently based in Brisbane, Australia. She employs a research practice informed by her matrilineal ties to her land and communities in Bougainville. This manifests in works created using a range of media, including photography, audio – video, sculpture, immersive installation, and print. She curates and collaborates across multi-art platforms using archives, working with communities, and developing commissions locally and internationally.

    Latai Taumoepeau (b:1972 Gadigal Ngura (Sydney), Australia) makes live-art-work. Her faiva (body-centred practice) is from her homelands, the Island Kingdom of Tonga and her birthplace, the Eora Nation. She mimicked, trained, and un-learned dance in multiple institutions of learning, beginning with her village, a suburban church hall, the club, and a university. Latai engages in the socio-political landscape of Australia with sensibilities of race, class & the female body politic; committed to bringing the voice of unseen communities to the frangipani-less foreground. Latai has presented and exhibited across borders, countries, and coastlines. Her works are held in private and public collections, including written publications. Latai is the 2023 recipient of The Creative Australia Emerging and Experimental Arts Award following her win of the 2022 ‘ANTI Festival Live Art’ Prize in Finland.

    Elisapeta Hinemoa Heta (Ngātiwai, Ngāpuhi, Waikato Tainui, Sāmoan, Tokelauan) is a multidisciplinary artist, designer, and mother, living and working in Tāmaki Makaurau, Auckland, Aotearoa New Zealand. Elisapeta’s career has spanned architecture, art, writing, film and performance, teaching and research and has resulted in a rich tapestry of collaborative works and projects that are centered on indigenous mātauranga (knowledge and ways of knowing) and tikanga (protocols and ceremony). In working through multidisciplinary practice, Elisapeta creates experiences that make visible our stories, many of which have been hidden, with a focus on indigenous and wāhine (women) centered story-telling. Through her art practice, Elisapeta, in collaboration with photographer John Miller (Ngāpuhi), took the exhibition Pouwātū: Active Presence to the 22nd Biennale of Sydney: NIRIN 2020, and brought it home to Objectspace Gallery in Tāmaki Makaurau (March – May 2021)

    Program in Ocean Space: March 23-October 13, 2024.
    Address: Chiesa di San Lorenzo
    Castello 5069, Venezia

    Photo: Latai Taumoepeau performing her work ArchipelaGO, THIS IS NOT A DRILL with local sports team in Ocean Space.

  • Artist spotlight: Johanna Tuukkanen, The Outstanding performer

    Artist spotlight: Johanna Tuukkanen, The Outstanding performer

    I interviewed Johanna Tuukkanen, who is currently preparing her PhD in art education and cultural policy. She is a well-known curator and art-maker herself, and the Artistic Director of ANTI festival based in Finland’s Kuopio. This week, January 30, 2015, she will also have a premiere of a new work Panopticon together with her colleague, choreographer Pirjo Yli-Maunula in Oulu, which is a vibrant capital in Northern Finland. Their new multidisciplinary work will articulate a hot topic of women’s ‘controlled bodies’, as they are often portrayed in fashion industry and magazines, taking a theme of aesthetic violence in relation to women’s bodies as a starting point in their performance. Simultaneously, their performance asks, are we allowed to mock this phenomenon, and even make fun of it in the arts? Johanna Tuukkanen has been making noise with her performance art for good 15 years now, highlighting women’s bodies in her performances many times before.

    Johanna Tuukkanen in Huippusuoritus, Outstanding Performance, Photo: Pekka Mäkinen
    Johanna Tuukkanen in Huippusuoritus, Outstanding Performance, Photo: Pekka Mäkinen

    Firstindigo&Lifestyle: Johanna, I have known you from the early 2000s onwards. It seems that there has been a lot of currency exchange around your artistry since that time. Finnish art scene, I believe, has also developed and changed during the past 15 years. Could you highlight in a nutshell, how did the 21-century look so far in the art world from your personal point of view? What are your greatest pros and cons in the field as a participant with so many roles?

    Johanna Tuukkanen: You are right, things really have changed! After studying performance and new dance in the Netherlands and Germany in 1990s, I moved back to Finland in 1997. In terms of the art scene, it was a kind of culture shock for me and it definitely took some time to find my way around it. From very early on, I found myself thinking how else I could make a difference in the arts other than working just as an artist.

    Since then, I do see and have also personally experienced that the field has expanded greatly, it has opened and it is accepted – not totally but more and more – that for example in the field of dance, there are multiple traditions from which an artistic practice can stem from, not only one or two. Also the growing interest in site-specifity, a kind of ‘trend’, has resulted in other kinds of expansions and effected how a cultural production organization whether a museum, a theatre, a festival or a freelance collective might operate. Currently I’m thinking a lot about the concept of social in the arts as many artists are producing socially engaged works in collectives and communities where the artist is not the central point of the work but the interest in a process, in shared authorship, in participation and dialogue…

    As a participant in the field, I feel that there are several communities in the art world where one can find a kind of ideological home and vast amount of possibilities. Yet, at the same time, although we do have some rather brave funding bodies, generally speaking our funding structures have not been able to develop in line with the field – thinking especially the amount of work that it produced by the freelance artists and companies in comparison with the institutions established in the 70s.

    Firstindigo&Lifestyle: You are known as a hardcore doer, and as a hands on professional when it comes to performance and to its management, to your curator’s role as well, and to a founder of a successful art-festival. Where lies the secret behind it all, how do you manage all your roles, or your doings, and don’t get burned-out at the same time? You seem to be shining.

    JT: Wow, thank you! I don’t really see myself that way… But yes, to say that I’m a doer is perhaps a good way to put it. I suppose I’ve been interested in many things and just started doing them, rather naively sometimes. I’ve not been waiting around for someone else to do the work but really dug my hands into stuff, working beyond my comfort zones, not counting hours… I can’t recommend it to anyone! To be enthusiastic, to get excited is a great energy and force also. For me doing different things is also very energizing, things feed off each other and I never feel that ‘I’m doing the same job’. Maybe also because I’m not a very organized person!

    But to be honest, time management is a big issue for me. I’m a very work oriented person and I have to actively work on prioritizing time for my family and friends and my own well-being. But I do do it! These days I prioritize regular exercise, try to eat well and sleep enough. I try to have one day off every week but if it’s not possible, I’ll make up for it by taking extended weekends off or mini holidays.

    I’m lucky to be working for organizations and things I really believe in and I feel connected to and supported by an international community. I’ve also managed to organize my life so that I live with my lovely family in a beautiful house where I can enjoy everyday aesthetics, quietness, the Finnish lake landscape, the forest and an amazing sauna.

    Firstindigo&Lifestyle: I associate you strongly with ANTI Contemporary Art Festival. How did this idea come forth, and develop into an international success story?

    JT: This is a long story but to put it short, I was working in the Regional Arts Council of North Savo at that time and with my regional artist colleague we wanted to create a new, international multidisciplinary contemporary art festival in Kuopio, to create international networking opportunities for local artists and to active the city and different sites in Kuopio through art. We really didn’t know how it would turn out, it was a real experiment! But already since the first festival, there was a lot of international interest and the festival was a great success. The networks I’d started building in the early 2000 were crucial for our international growth and reputation and of course artists themselves are great messengers of a quality festival. I’ve personally always thought that international networking is very important and for me it has also set the standards how to run a festival. But I suppose the most important thing is that ANTI has a unique concept and in fact, it’s also modelled in different parts of the world. This all has taken an enormous amount of work and I’m grateful for the wonderful individuals who have worked for the festival over the years.

    Firstindigo&Lifestyle: I admire your knowledge on the performance field, internationally you seem to have a network of artists that resonate with your own way of working. Was it organic to find collaborators accross the country borders?

     JT:  Yes, it all has happened very organically. ANTI has also been a partner in two European projects and it has been a great gift and learning process to collaborate with international live art curators and festival directors.

    Firstindigo&Lifestyle: Finland is getting a Dance House finally, how did the miracle happen?

     JT: Well, I’m extremely happy to be working for the Dance House but the background work with the private funding bodies was done and negotiated before I even started so I can’t take any credit for it. The Dance House initiative is very lucky to have a fantastic project manager, Hanna-Mari Peltomäki, but also the time was right – the Finnish dance sector was ready, the private funding partners were ready and lots work was done in a rather short amount of time.

    Firstindigo&Lifestyle: What does living and working in Finland mean to you? Where else in the world would you imagine to live?

    JT:  Living in Finland and outside the Helsinki area has been a very conscious cultural political choice for me. I’ve wanted to show that great art can be made anywhere and it is really crucial to have artists and cultural professional working and making an impact in different regions. These days, especially with digitalisation and good connections, I don’t really think it matters so much where you live.

    But in recent years, as my children are getting older and as I want to find new professional challenges, I’ve become open to other options as well. Like I said earlier, I’m very work oriented so it’s probably work that will take me somewhere… There many places I could imagine living i.e. Australia and Denmark. But where ever I’d go, my work has to be meaningful. I can’t really imagine moving somewhere for the sake of the place or city.

    Firstindigo&Lifestyle: Where are you heading next, any specific plans for the future?

    JT: Good question. I’m open and up for new challenges. I completed an MA in Cultural Policy last year and enjoyed that process greatly. What a luxury to deepen one’s knowledge and expertise! I’m the beginning of my PhD so probably for the next years I will be juggling my time between the Dance House, ANTI Festival and my research…unless something totally unexpected happens. Which of course is very likely in this life.

    Johanna Tuukkanen and Pirjo Yli-Maunula, Panopticon, Photo: Pekka Mäkinen
    Johanna Tuukkanen and Pirjo Yli-Maunula, Panopticon-premiere, Jan 30, 2015. Photo: Pekka Mäkinen