Collection
Seta

Ane Tonga Seta

In Seta, Ane Tonga depicts the nifo koula, or gold tooth, of a family member in Aotearoa. For Tongan communities living outside Tonga, nifo koula is a way of remaining connected in memory to the islands; many receive their nifo koula in Tonga as a way of commemorating a trip. There is a gendered aspect to the role of nifo koula, as adornment worn by women. The gold used for the dental procedure is often sourced from old family jewellery, lending further layers of ancestral connection for the wearer.

While it has become a contemporary Tongan ‘tradition’, nifo koula also relates to transnational visual culture through its relationship to the metal grills, or tooth jewellery, of US hip-hop culture. Combined with the bold red lipstick and leopard print earrings, this image of nifo koula gives voice to an aspect of contemporary Tongan culture.

(Perilous: Unheard Stories from the Collection, 6 August 2022- )

Notes
Untitled [Quentin (Kin) Woollaston Shearing] by Sir Toss Woollaston

Untitled [Quentin (Kin) Woollaston Shearing] by Sir Toss Woollaston

This article first appeared as 'The fine juggling act to create his artwork' in The Press on 8 June 2017.

Collection
Porringer

Nathaniel Locke Porringer

Nathaniel Locke was a renowned English silversmith, active in London in the late 1600s and early 1700s. Bearing his LO signature and the Britannia symbol, this vessel is marked as highest quality silver, and was probably a child’s christening gift. A porringer was a bowl commonly used for serving soup, stews or porridge.

(Out of Time, 23 September 2023 – 28 April 2024)

Collection
Coffee Pot

Hester Bateman Coffee Pot

Born into a poor family in London and without a formal education, Hester Bateman (née Needham) became one of England’s most successful silversmiths in the late eighteenth century. Hester married silversmith John Bateman in about 1730 and inherited his workshop after his death in 1760, thereafter running her own family business for three decades.

(Out of Time, 23 September 2023 – 28 April 2024)

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