Leilani Kake
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Talking Tivaevae |
Leilani studied Moving Image at Manukau Institute of Technology (MIT) and worked at Tangata Whenua Television. In 2004, Leilani decided to pursue her art fulltime. Also that year, Ema Tavola invited her to participate in an exhibition at Fresh Gallery in Otara. Her work for this show was an opportunity to address the spiritual consequences of the Foreshore and Seabed Bill for Māori. Entitled Te Kiri Haehae, the multimedia installation addresses how the loss of the Bill was like the loss of family for Māori because to be cut off from land is to be cut off from ancestral ties and knowledge.
Cordoning off an area in the courtyard in front of the gallery, Leilani brought in two tonnes of sand to create the illusion of
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Talking Tivaevae |
As part of postgraduate studies at MIT in 2005, Leilani documented the making of tivaevae in the installation Talking Tivaevae. The tivaevae's island designs, in the colours of the Māori flag, represent the Māori ideology of balance with nature. Black as darkness, in the sense of darkness in the womb or before an idea arrives, a positive darkness; white as enlightenment and purity; red as the female essence, blood, and connections.
Leilani's art touches upon the social and spiritual and work like Tino Rangatira Tanga is not uncomplicated but work like this resonates.
In 2008 as her father Richard Kake was dying, not knowing what to do, Leilani instinctively picked up her camera, putting it between her and the devastating passing of her father. There was anger amongst her family that Leilani could go against Māori tradition and record the events but knowing her father's constant encouragement of her art Leilani kept filming. After her father's burial, the footage helped Leilani to heal
Tino Rangatira Tanga
Tino Rangatira Tanga is not so much about death as it is about life. The installation calls the audience into the space where three monitors create a semi-circle around the viewer. The monitors play footage of Richard Kake receiving his Ta Moko Rangatira (chiefly facial tattoo) with boys performing a Māori chant paying homage to their chief followed by a hangi (feast) to celebrate the event; the last days of his life and funeral; and a compilation of photographs of Richard and whanau (family) through the years.

This is Leilani's tribute to her father's memory. This work, like the others, is healing part of Leilani's journey through her art.
The same year she produced Tino Rangatira Tanga, Leilani was awarded the Salamander Gallery/Creative New Zealand Emerging Pacific Visual Artist Award. Leilani and her work have travelled extensively throughout the Pacific to American Samoa, Tonga, Cook Islands, Fiji, and Hawai‛i as well as Taiwan and USA.
























