Jordan Davey-Emms 2024 – 2025
Jordan Davey-Emms was Te Tuhi’s 2024 Curatorial Intern, who curated a programme under the name soft shell. Jordan’s programme took place at Te Tuhi’s Parnell Project Space from June 2024 - March 2025.
The name soft shell references the tender bodies of crayfish and other crustaceans, revealed when their hard shells have been cast off to allow for growth. Jordan sees the internship as a similar short period for growth, located in Parnell where the Waipapa stream used to flow.
Jordan set up soft shell as a flexible, friendly structure that supports artistic practice and community building. Soft shell dug deeper into the themes and approaches Jordan experimented with at Wormhole Gallery and Studio in Edgecumbe: thinking about living inside ecologies; centering partnership and reciprocity; and playing with the sensory potential of exhibition making.
Soft shell was an opportunity to test this approach in a different context. How might a small-town-informed curatorial practice operate in the big city?
Jordan Davey-Emms is an artist and curator, currently working as Gallery Manager of Blue Oyster Art Project Space in Ōtepoti Dunedin. Prior to her internship at Te Tuhi, she ran Wormhole in Edgecumbe, Whakatāne. She was a founding member of the Kauae Raro Research Collective (2020 - 2022) and the winner of the 2017 Glaister Ennor Award at Sanderson Contemporary Art. Jordan is interested in play, process, place, ecologies, and belonging. Her writing can be found in Plates Journal, Vernacular, and on Wormhole's website.
See a list of projects curated by Jordan Davey-Emms at soft shell below:
→ I Carry Your Love on My Back
→ Waulking Song
→ Permission Slip
→ Pasabit!
→ Taura
Felixe Laing 2022 – 2023
Felixe Laing was awarded the role of curatorial intern in July 2022. During her eighteen-month internship, Felixe curated a programme of exhibitions and events at Chez Derriere, the name she gave Te Tuhi's Parnell Project Space at Parnell Station.
Chez Derriere, in its literal French translation, describes ‘a place of business or home at the behind’. The name refers to its physical location in the back of Parnell but also as a space for experimentation and emerging practice. The name Chez Derriere also references Felixe’s family history of her parents as restaurateurs.
At Chez Derriere, Felixe explored the role of the ‘host’ in the context of hospitality in relation to the role of the curator in contemporary art - thinking about how to host and care for audiences, artists and ideas within exhibition making and alternative event based curatorial models.
Felixe developed a programme which explored playful practice and engaged audiences and artists in experimental, and collaborative artmaking, research and writing. She is interested in how art, food and hospitality intersect with participatory, performance and social practices. She is also interested in publishing and writing, editing three publications during her internship.
Felixe is a curator, writer, and editor, who has worked across the arts sector in Aotearoa. She graduated with a BFA (Hons) from Elam School of Fine Arts University of Auckland Waipapa Taumata Rau in 2016 and a Master of Museum and Heritage Practice from Victoria University of Wellington Te Herenga Waka (Distinction) in 2021.
See a list of exhibitions, events and publications curated or edited by Felixe Laing at Chez Derriere below:
→ Food Futures: Local Harvest
→ Food Futures: Kai Māori
→ Publication: Snacks
→ Art writing programme
→ Rumpus: Jordan Davey-Emms, Isabella Dampney & Samantha Cheng
→ Play workshop: Passengers with Samantha Cheng
→ Play workshop: CA$HFLOW with Isabella Dampney
→ Play workshop: Headshot kitchen with Jordan Davey-Emms
→ Jacqueline Stojanović: A net woven from my own hair
→ Publication: A net woven from my own hair
→ Cindy Huang: The practice of eating together
→ Uma Tuffnell: showstopper
→ Huarere: Weather Eye, Weather Ear e-publication (co-edited)
Jasmine Tuiā 2021
Jasmine Tuiā (Matautu and Gagaifo, Anoāma’a Falefā and Malifa Apia, Samoa; West Auckland, Aotearoa New Zealand) was one of the participants in Tautai's Oceania Internship programme for 2021, which she carried out at Te Tuhi. While Tuiā's original plans to curate an exhibition at Parnell Project Space were hampered by the Covid-19 lockdown, Tuiā seized upon her internship as opportunity to produce a limited edition artists' book, Tālofa lava uō oe: I write letters, what do you do?
Written, edited and designed by Tuiā, the book is structured by written correspondence between Tuiā and six local artists during the lockdown in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland. Tālofa lava uō oe compiles the letters, artworks and poems exchanged between Tuiā and her chosen artists during this period, charting the importance of communication and collaboration between a group of young artists in Tāmaki Makaurau.
Tuiā is a Sāmoan tapa maker and uses embroidery and stitching to think about Moana cultural memory. From the villages of Matautu Lefaga, Falefa Anoama'a and Malifa Sāmoa, Tuiā explores her familial connections to these places through Sāmoan techniques of storytelling and siapo. Her curatorial and community facilitation passions involve collective talanoa, or conversations, and community collaborations.
James Tapsell-Kururangi 2020–2021
James Tapsell-Kururangi (Te Arawa, Ngāti Whakaue, Ngāti Pikiao, Ngāti Mākino, Tainui, Ngāti Raukawa, Ngāti Porou, Te Whānau-a-Rākairoa) was awarded the role of curatorial intern in January 2020. During his internship, Tapsell-Kururangi curated a programme of exhibitions and events at Papatūnga, the name he gave Te Tuhi's Parnell Project Space at Parnell Station. The name Papatūnga appealed as one translation for platform (a platform for artists, not just trains), but also for its connection to papatūānuku, papa kainga (home), kaupapa and, simply, papa (place, space).
Tapsell-Kururangi is an artist, curator and writer. He graduated from Massey University with a Master of Fine Arts (First Class Honours) in 2019, and has had his artwork featured in exhibitions across Aotearoa New Zealand and overseas. Curatorially, Tapsell-Kururangi's practice centres local Māori histories and focuses on building relationships within the community of artists he works with. His artistic practice is built from his whakapapa, in which he composes waiata framed within moving image artworks.
See a list of exhibitions and events curated by James Tapsell-Kururangi at Papatūnga below:
→ Te Pō
→ Fashion show: Rawiri Brown, Emma Jing-Cornall & Taylor Groves
→ Isabella Loudon: wastelands
→ Qianye Lin & Qianhe 'AL' Lin: What a thrill, WHAT A SUCCESS!!
→ MASS Alexandria
→ Shaun Thomas McGill: Durham Street West [Men's Convenience]