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Revision as of 10:59, 4 January 2025 by Karl Twist (talk | contribs) (Create article)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Marks of Mana is a documentary about Pacific female tattooing. It is the first film to cover the subject.
Background
The film was produced and directed by Lisa Taouma, a New Zealand film maker of Samoan ancestry. It features Samoan tatau artist Tyla Vaeau Ta’ufo’ou of an indigenous tattoo studio on K’ Road called Karanga Ink. In the film she returns to Samoa to learn more and reconnect.
Reception
The film had its New Zealand premiere in Wellington. It was also set to screen at the imagineNATIVE indigenous film festival in Toronto, Canada in the week following the Wellington premiere.
On 6 June 2021, the film was screened at the Dunedin Public Art Gallery.
The screening at the Queensland Multicultural Center which included a Q&A session with director Lisa Taouma, tatau artist Julia Gray, Maryann Talia Pau and Lanatina from House of Iliganoa was sold out.
Futher reading
- Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 4 May, 2024 -Meet the women practicing the ancient tradition of Sāmoan tatau By Dinah Lewis Boucher
References
- Queensland Multicultural Center, 7 Apr 2024 - Pasifika Wave presents Marks of Mana
- The Guardian, Sat 30 Jan 2021 - We had no paper, but we had our bodies': the sacred and symbolic in Polynesian tattoos - Lagipoiva Cherelle Jackson
- NZ on Screen - Marks of Mana
- Radio New Zealand, 14 October 2018 - Marks of Mana: the first film dedicated to female tattooing in the Pacific
- Dunedin Public Art Gallery, 21 June 2021 - Marks of Mana
- Queensland Multicultural Center, 7 Apr 2024 - Pasifika Wave presents Marks of Mana