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April/May 2020 - BAY OF PLENTY BUSINESS NEWS

From mid-2016 Bay of Plenty businesses have a new voice, Bay of Plenty Business News. This new publication reflects the region’s growth and importance as part of the wider central North Island economy.

From mid-2016 Bay of Plenty businesses have a new voice, Bay of Plenty Business News. This new publication reflects the region’s growth and importance as part of the wider central North Island economy.

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20 <strong>BAY</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>PLENTY</strong> <strong>BUSINESS</strong> <strong>NEWS</strong> <strong>April</strong>/<strong>May</strong> <strong>2020</strong><br />

The Tauranga <strong>May</strong>or’s Award presented by deputy<br />

mayor Larry Baldock to Kevin McCardell for Plight of<br />

the Bumblebee, <strong>2020</strong>.<br />

Premier<br />

local Bay<br />

artists are<br />

recognised<br />

Supreme Award winning entry Wahi<br />

Ngaro, 2019, by Israel Randall.<br />

The winners of Tauranga’s premier art<br />

award, have been announced, with the<br />

<strong>2020</strong> Miles Supreme Award going to<br />

local artist Israel Randell for her work<br />

Wahi Ngaro, 2019 a striking installation<br />

of electroluminescent wire.<br />

ARTS AND CULTURE<br />

> BY ALICE HUTCHISON<br />

Alice Hutchison is the director of the Tauranga Art Gallery.<br />

She can be reached on director@artgallery.org.nz.<br />

The awards are presented<br />

by the Tauranga Art<br />

Gallery Toi Tauranga,<br />

in partnership with the Venetta<br />

Miles Trust. The supreme<br />

award carries a cash prize of<br />

$10,000.<br />

A crowd of friends and<br />

family filled the Tauranga Art<br />

Gallery in mid-March in support<br />

of the 40 finalists (from<br />

almost 100 entries) and waited<br />

with excitement to hear the<br />

announcement of the selected<br />

winners from guest judge<br />

Sarah Hudson. Hudson is currently<br />

based in Whakatane and<br />

is the curator of Te Koputu a<br />

te whanga toi, the Whakatane<br />

Library and Exhibition Centre.<br />

Hudson said she was impressed<br />

by the broad range of<br />

Winners, friends and family at the Miles Art Awards.<br />

All images courtesy of Tauranga Art Gallery.<br />

creative works entered in this<br />

years’ awards and had chosen<br />

works that were “moving,<br />

edgy, politically-minded and<br />

bold”.<br />

Miles Supreme Award winner<br />

Randell’s work explained<br />

in her artist’s statement that<br />

her work examined “Wahi<br />

Ngaro, the ‘hidden realm’.<br />

It examined the notion of the<br />

void (Te Korekore), an in-between<br />

space – or the places<br />

from which all things originate<br />

from. “The triangle, a primordial<br />

shape, refers to the wharetangata<br />

(womb), symbolic of<br />

the space from which we come<br />

from and return to,” the artist<br />

stated.<br />

Hudson said: “This artist<br />

has created a surprising, edgy<br />

work that grounds us deep<br />

down into the bones of this<br />

land.”<br />

She added that she had enjoyed<br />

the subtle sound element<br />

of the work, which she read as<br />

screaming into the void.<br />

“Entering an installation<br />

piece into an open competition<br />

is a bold move. The striking<br />

visual impact of Te Korekore<br />

and its strong conceptual foundations<br />

rooted in mātauranga<br />

Māori has resulted in a very<br />

moving experience for the<br />

audience.”<br />

The entries submitted for<br />

this year’s Miles Art Awards<br />

reflected the diverse display of<br />

the talent and passion of artists<br />

who currently live in the Tauranga<br />

district and the wider<br />

region.<br />

The art works submitted<br />

have never been exhibited previously<br />

in a public exhibition.<br />

Also presented were the<br />

following awards:<br />

• The Incubator Emerging<br />

Artist Award to Adrienne<br />

Ranson for Cloud, Rock,<br />

Mountain No.2, 2019.<br />

• The Ethel MacMillan<br />

Award to Brylee Courtney<br />

for Black Arena, 2019.<br />

• The Tauranga <strong>May</strong>or’s<br />

Award to Kevin McCardell<br />

for Plight of the Bumblebee,<br />

<strong>2020</strong> .<br />

• The Friends of the Tauranga<br />

Art Gallery Award to<br />

Zig Beatnik for Anarchist,<br />

2018.<br />

• The People’s Choice<br />

Award, still to be announced,<br />

which is open for<br />

nomination by the public.

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