Meet Your 2024 Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi Laureates
Published: Monday 21 October 2024
On Friday night, Aotearoa New Zealand's creative community came together in full force to celebrate the arts, and the artists shaping our nation’s future. This year, we are delighted to honour eight Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi Laureates – artists that have been outstanding in their field, and are having a significant impact.
They each receive a $30,000 gift (generously funded by our Kotahi Laureate givers) along with a $5,000 top up from One NZ. That’s a grand total of $280,000 direct to New Zealand’s most remarkable artists!
View the Videos of Your 2024 Laureates
Alison Wong
Cantonese (Jung Seng/Zengcheng 增城) New Zealander
Discipline: Literature
Receiving the Burr/Tatham Trust Award
Alison Wong is a novelist and poet whose works weave together themes of identity, migration, and cultural heritage. Her poignant explorations of heritage and history amplify diverse voices, and she proudly stands as the first – and still the only – Asian New Zealand writer to win the NZ Post Book Award for Fiction for her historical novel As the Earth Turns Silver.
Claire Cowan
Discipline: Music
Receiving the Joanna Hickman, Waiwetu Trust Award
Claire Cowan is a trailblazing composer and multi-instrumentalist who transcends concert, film, television, theatre and ballet. Celebrated for her ability to bridge classical and popular genres, she made history as Aotearoa New Zealand's first female composer to score a full-length ballet for the Royal New Zealand Ballet's Hansel and Gretel.
Carin Wilson
Mataatua, Ngāti Awa, Tūhourangi
Discipline: Design/Sculpture
Receiving the Design Award gifted by the Crane Foundation
Carin Wilson Kahui Whetu Ngā Aho is an influential designer and sculptor whose career has been dedicated to advancing Māori design principles and promoting culturally relevant practices in architecture and furniture making. Carin's work encompasses a wide range of mediums, from handcrafted furniture to large-scale public art installations, often inspired by his deep connection to Māori narratives and the natural environment.
Horomona Horo
Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Porou, Taranaki
Discipline: Taonga Pūoro/Composer
Receiving the Te Moana-nui-a-Kiwa Award gifted by Jillian Friedlander
Horomona Horo is a masterful composer and musician known for his expertise in taonga pūoro, the traditional Māori musical instruments. With over two decades dedicated to this ancient Māori art form, he innovatively blends traditional sounds with diverse genres – preserving ancestral voices while playing a pivotal role in its international resurgence.
Lonnie Hutchinson
Ngāti Kurī ki Ngāi Tahu, Samoan (Faleilili), Celtic
Discipline: Visual Arts
Receiving the My ART Visual Arts Award gifted by Sonja and Glenn Hawkins
Lonnie Hutchinson is a leading multidisciplinary artist whose thought-provoking works comment astutely on aspects of indigeneity, colonisation, and the complexities of identity. For over three decades, she has drawn from her rich Ngāi Tahu, Samoan, and Celtic heritage to create powerful installations that fuse personal moments with global issues.
Miriama McDowell
Ngāti Hine, Ngāpuhi
Discipline: Theatre
Receiving the Sir Roger Hall Theatre Award
Miriama McDowell is an award-winning actor, director, and writer dedicated to uplifting Māori and indigenous voices through her storytelling. With a career spanning over two decades, she has enriched New Zealand’s theatre and film landscape, fostering vital cultural dialogue and challenging societal norms.
Saskia Leek
Discipline: Visual Arts
Receiving the Female Arts Practitioner Award gifted by Liz Aitken, Foggy Valley Aotearoa
Saskia Leek is a visionary contemporary painter whose intimate-scale works explore the intersections of amateur and canonical painting traditions. Her distinctive style and thoughtful use of everyday subject matter have earned her national and international recognition, including a nomination for the prestigious Walters Prize.
Victor Rodger
Discipline: Theatre
Samoan (Iva), Scottish (Broughty Ferry)
Receiving the Toi Kō Iriiri Queer Arts Award gifted by Hall Cannon
Victor Rodger ONZM is an award-winning playwright and producer, celebrated for his bold and provocative works that explore issues of race, identity, and sexuality. His plays, including Sons, Black Faggot and My Name is Gary Cooper, have earned international acclaim, establishing him as a pioneer in queer writing.
The Arts are Powered by People
We couldn’t have celebrated last night in such style without One NZ, Sunday Star-Times, Auckland Live and Tātaki Auckland Unlimited. Thanks to them the Awards Party came to life in the Aotea Arts Quarter.
We are able to recognise these outstanding artists thanks to the generosity of our Kotahi giving collective, Major Laureate Award givers, and One NZ for topping up their gifts. Special thanks to Corner Store for helping us shine a light on their stories, and to Stuff for getting our artists in front of Aotearoa New Zealand.
Want to be a part of the movement that wholeheartedly believes in the power of the arts? Learn more about how you can make a difference.