Fa'asinomaga; finding identity takes milk and two sugars
Kū Kahiko Gallery
Sat 7th Oct - 8th Nov
Amanda’s use of Fa’asinomaga in the title of her show relates to her sense of cultural identity. She grew up in the pacific diaspora, over 10,000 km away from her grandparents in Mangere, without any extended Sāmoan family, community or representation nearby. Amanda often struggled with identity and connecting with her Sāmoan culture. Despite being so far away, her Nana always managed to stay connected, sending care packages full of lollies, t-shirts and Sāmoan goodies.
Lifelines to the culture that Amanda would cling to.
When Amanda was in her 20’s, she casually mentioned to her Dad how she prefers her tea. As it turns out, her Nana took her tea the exact same way. Milk and two sugars.
The title finding identity takes milk and two sugars, pays homage to this unique similarity that connects Amanda with her Nana.
This exhibition explores the idea of “what if?”. What would life look like, if Amanda grew up having a regular Sunday cuppa with her Nana? To learn about her culture, to talanoa, to faikakala. To engage in passing down the knowledge to the next generation, one cuppa at a time. To share the Minties and Wheatens her Nana would send, together at the same table. To connect and build identity, all over tea with milk & two sugars.
Amanda will set the table for a cuppa with treats, all in the style of her Nana’s 70’s styled Mangere fale. An acknowledgement of what could have been between granddaughter and grandmother, along with the importance of intergenerational matriarchal connection and talanoa.