Dagmar Dyck
Dagmar Vaikalafi Dyck (born 1972) is a New Zealand artist of Tongan and German descent. Dyck's prints and paintings are often inspired by her cultural heritage and explore textile practices of Tonga. Dyck completed a Bachelor for Fine Arts through Elam School of Fine Arts in 1994 and a Post-Graduate Diploma of Fine Arts in 1995. She was the first women of Tongan descent to do so. In 2014 Dyck received the Contemporary Artist Award at the Creative New Zealand Arts Pasifika Awards.
Selected exhibitions
- 2014 Tonga 'i Onopooni: Tonga Contemporary, Pataka Art + Museum, Porirua Wellington
- 2013. Pacific Voices II, Orexart Auckland.
- 2013. To Be Pacific, Tairawhiti Museum + Art Gallery Gisborne.
- 2013 Pacifica: Patterns of Exchange. Flagstaff Gallery Auckland with Sheyne Tuffery
- 2013 Made in Oceania, Tapa Art + Landscapes, Rautenstrauch-Joest Museum, Cologne
- 2013 Between the Lines, Solander Gallery Wellington,
- 2012. Made in New Zealand: An exhibition of Fine Art from New Zealand. Agora Gallery, New York, USA.
Dagmar Dyck
kahoa
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 760 x 560
From an edition of 40
1997
Dagmar Dyck
kafa
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 410 x 605
From an edition of 30
1997
Dagmar Dyck
maea
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 410 x 605
From an edition of 30
1997
Dagmar Dyck
Brown flight
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 310 x 280
From an edition of 10
2013
Dagmar Dyck
Fibre threads II
mixed media (framed)
Dimensions (mm) 290 x 260
From an edition of 1
2013
Dagmar Dyck
Blurred lines III
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 350 x 270
From an edition of 15
2013
Dagmar Dyck
Blurred lines II
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 350 x 270
From an edition of 15
2013
Dagmar Dyck
Blurred lines I
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 350 x 270
From an edition of 15
2013
Dagmar Dyck
Classic
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 255 x 530
From an edition of 10
2013
Dagmar Dyck
Woven strips II
mixed media (framed)
Dimensions (mm) 300 x 560
From an edition of 1
2013
Dagmar Dyck
Woven strips I
mixed media (framed)
Dimensions (mm) 300 x 560
From an edition of 1
2013
Dagmar Dyck
Home grown
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 305 x 270
From an edition of 10
2013
Dagmar Dyck
Superfine
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 530 x 530
From an edition of 10
2013
Dagmar Dyck
Free life
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 610 x 270
From an edition of 10
2013
Dagmar Dyck
Black velvet
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 270 x 610
From an edition of 10
2013
Dagmar Dyck
Navigate
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 560 x 380
From an edition of 10
2013
Dagmar Dyck
Navigate
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 560 x 380
From an edition of 10
2013
Dagmar Dyck
Survive
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 560 x 380
From an edition of 10
2013
Dagmar Dyck
Actual
woodcut
Dimensions (mm) 580 x 440
From an edition of 10
2015
Dagmar Dyck
Implied
woodcut
Dimensions (mm) 580 x 440
From an edition of 10
2015
Dagmar Dyck
Fala
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 810 x 600
From an edition of 40
Dagmar Dyck
Kupesi Styles I
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 610 x 800
From an edition of 45
Dagmar Dyck
Kupesi Styles II
screenprint
Dimensions (mm) 610 x 800
From an edition of 45
Dagmar Dyck
Placement
screenprint
Dimensions (mm)
From an edition of 45
Dagmar Dyck
Acceptance
screenprint
Dimensions (mm)
From an edition of 45
Sopolemalama Filipe Tohi
Sopolemalama Filipe Tohi (born 23 Aug 1959 in Tonga) is a Tongan artist who has lived in New Zealand since 1978. He has exhibited in major exhibitions in New Zealand and abroad. Several major collections include his work. The 2010 Art and Asia Pacific Almanac describes him as "Tongan art's foremost ambassador".
Exhibitions
- Te Moemoea no Iotefa, an exhibition of contemporary Pacific art at the Sarjeant Art Gallery in Wanganui in 1990
- Bottled Ocean
an exhibition of work by New Zealand artists of Pacific Island descent
shown at a number of metropolitan art galleries in New Zealand in
1994-1995.
- Genealogy of lines: Hohoko ē tohitohi at the Govett-Brewster in 2002.
- Tohi was an invited artist for Partage d’exotismes (sharing exoticisms) at the Biennale of Lyon, France, 2000.
- Date Line: zeitgenössische Kunst des Pazifik = contemporary art from the Pacific, Berlin, 2007.
- Fatuemaka mei falekafa: Sopolemalama Filipe Tohi.Survey part one at Mangere Arts Centre, 2011.
- Home AKL: Exhibition held at Auckland Art Gallery, 7 July to 22 October 2012.
- Tonga ʻi onopooni = Tonga contemporary, an exhibition of contemporary Tongan art curated by Nina Kinahoi Tonga, Pataka Art + Museum, Porirua, New Zealand,2014.
Macaw flying through the air
Manulele detail
Matakimoana, 2007, aluminium, 15000x4000x1500mm
Affinities
Tupu'anga
Haukulasi detail
Manulele detail
Haupapa (female), 1998
Kupenga
Viliami Tolutaʻu
Asipeli Havea "Viliami" Tolutaʻu (born 1951) is a sculptor and a professor of sculpture at Brigham Young University–Hawaii (BYU–Hawaii).
Tolutaʻu attended high school at Liahona High School in Tonga and went to study at BYU–Hawaii. He then went on to earn an M.F.A. from Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, in 1983. He has been on BYU–Hawaii's art faculty since 1991.
Among works by Tolutaʻu is the statue of George Q. Cannon and Jonathan Napela at BYU–Hawaii that was unveiled as part of the 1997 Mormon pioneer sesquecentennial celebration. He also did a statue depicting Finau Ulukalala Feletoa II's 1807 encounter with writing for Liahona High School. He also did the sculpture
Mamalahoe that is at the Windward Oahu Courthouse. He has also done sculptures for several elementary schools in Hawaii.
Among those who have studied sculpture under Tolutaʻu are Steven K. Sperry and Jacob Dobson.
Tolutaʻu also did the sketch art for
Tuku Fonua - The Land Given to God, a BYU–Hawaii produced film that was done on commission from the government of Tonga.
In 2007, Tolutaʻu co-chaired along with Tavita Kaʻili the centennial celebration of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Tonga. This was sponsored by the Uho o Tonga Historical Society, the Mormon Pacific Historical Society and the Mormon Historic Sites Foundation.
Tolutaʻu is a Latter-day Saint. He has been a bishop in the LDS Church.
bronze
by
ceremony
dedication
for
hoʻokoʻana
mauiakalana
o
sculpture
sculture
tolutaʻu
viliami
Kaneohe District Court - Inspired by Kānāwai Māmalahoe (the law of the splintered paddle), Viliami
Portraits of "Amatabaulay".
Photographs taken, probably by Corporal C Newbold, between 19 and 22
July 1874. The Voyage of H.M.S. Challenger (1872-1876) was funded by the
British Government for scientific purposes and seems to have been the
first expedition to carry an official photographer as well as an
official artist.
This photograph is part of the Australian National Maritime Museum's
collection of nitrate negatives taken by Harold Nossiter and his son
Harold Nossiter Junior in the 1920s and 1930s.

Identifier: historyofmankind01ratz (find matches)
Title: The history of mankind
Year: 1896 (1890s)
Authors: Ratzel, Friedrich, 1844-1904 Butler, Arthur John, 1844-1910
Subjects: Ethnology Anthropology
Publisher: London, Macmillan and co., ltd. New York, The Macmillan co.
Contributing Library: Wellesley College Library
Digitizing Sponsor: Wellesley College Library
View Book Page: Book Viewer
About This Book: Catalog Entry
View All Images: All Images From Book
Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book.
Text Appearing Before Image:
a. (From a photograph in the Godeffroy Album.) but often also from
vanity—the woman not caring to have children until the thirdyear of her
marriage. In some parts of the Solomons and the New Hebridesall children
even are killed at birth, and substitutes purchased. If the child is a
girl,it has generally more prospect of being kept alive where
inheritance goes in thefemale line, and where it will carry on the
family succession. The birth of twins THE FAMILY AND THE STATE IN
OCEANIA 269 is not regarded as actually injurious, though there is a
disposition to look uponthem as uncanny. If the children are once
allowed to live, everything is done forthem with due care. Not only the
parents but the relations make them presents.Little children who are
living after their parents death are -adopted by others ;if they are
older, natural ties, as well as the laws of inheritance, are
honestlyobserved in the traditional way. The most important epochs in
life have their own religious consecration.
Text Appearing After Image:
Tongan ladies. (From the Godeffroy Album.) God is closer to man than
is always the case with us Christians. In Saa, and onthe Lepers Island,
toy bows are offered, a week or ten days after birth, on behalfof the
boy, that he may be strong ; mat-fibres for the girl, that she may
beindustrious. The participation in this of relations on the fathers
side is asignificant infraction of mother-right, which in other respects
is jealously guarded.In Hawaii, the child at weaning is brought from
the mother-house, Noa, to thefather-house, Jlua, and thereby falls under
the taboo to be presently mentioned. 27o THE HISTORY OF MANKIND
Thereupon the mother sacrifices a pig to her family god, while the
father offersava and implores health for the new scion. At the entrance
upon manhood theirconsecration is repeated in more severe forms, and
attended by customs of ahardening nature. A general fast is held in the
family. The grandfather,between whose soul and that of the next
generation but one a closer a
Note About Images
Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images
that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and
appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the
original work.

Haamonga A Maui, Tongatapu, Tonga, picture taken by uploader on visit 1990
Hobe / Holger Behr - Own work
Tongan Stool
LACMA recently created the
Pacific Islands division, and is collecting art from throughout
Polynesia and Melanesia. Artwork is arranged in the order of the
settlement of the islands; that means Tongan, Maori, and Hawaiian art
come last, as such places were the last to be settled.
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Shows
Tongan canoes, with sails and cabins, and two Tongan men paddling a
smaller canoe in the foreground; derived from "Boats of the Friendly
Isles" a record of Cook's visit to Tonga, 1773-4, during his second
circumnavigation of the world.
Hodges,
William, 1744-1797. drawn from nature by W Hodges. Engraved by W Watts.
No. XLII. Published Feb[ruary] 1st, 1777, by Wm Strahan, in New Street
Shoe Lane, and Thos Cadell in the Strand, London. - Alexander Turnbull Library

Two Tongan young women.
George Brown, D.D. - George Brown, D.D. Pioneer-missionary and explorer an Autobiography. London MCMVIII
Beschreibung: Unterstand für Pirogen (Schiffe), 1832
Quelle: http://www.tongaturismo.info/old-tonga/stampe-24.jpg
Lizenz: gemeinfrei, da abgelaufen
de:Kategorie:Bild:Bauwerk
Vavaʻu (Tonga) girls playing traditional games: l->r: hiko, ula, meʻetuʻupaki, fisipā
Tauʻolunga - original unknown; source Jennifer Shennam
Mała figurka z kości słoniowej zakupiona na Fidżi w 1868r. - Tonga - 002026snieznany
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