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| Article 1 |
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| The Success Story of Cook Islands Art | ||||||||
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Just in case someone hasn’t noticed yet: art is booming here. Our many overseas visitors are certainly partly responsible for this, but there are other reasons why our different art forms are thriving. Apart from showing Cook Islands culture to tourists, the purpose of art is to make our lives more complicated – and interesting. Art decorates, entertains and makes us think, and we would not much enjoy life without it. Just in case someone hasn’t noticed yet: art is booming here. Our many overseas visitors are certainly partly responsible for this, but there are other reasons why our different art forms are thriving. Apart from showing Cook Islands culture to tourists, the purpose of art is to make our lives more complicated – and interesting. Art decorates, entertains and makes us think, and we would not much enjoy life without it. All over the world, art has flourished most in cultures that enjoyed prosperity: Egypt, China, Greece, Roman Empire, during the Renaissance, etc. In the Pacific, the art of different cultures have developed highest in communities that were socially well organised and without threat from neighbours. The special status of the Ta’unga also indicates that artists worked under a certain protection and were often exempt from other work in the community. Pacific Renaissance Carving has also been revived, traditional sculpture has been rediscovered and new designs are more and more intricate and original. Tattooing is popular again and here too, new patterns have evolved. Textile art has come a long way since the early tapa costumes and designs, and it is now
one of the most high-profile art forms in the Cook Islands. Our fashion designs are playing an
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![]() Tim Manavaora Buchanan |
Article 2: Article 3: Article 4: Article 5: Article 6: |
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![]() Kay George |
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![]() Loretta Reynolds |
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The new art form Over the last 10 years, the local visual arts were fertilised by several artists with art education Although many elements of the contemporary art works are based on traditional images Artist’s responsibility ― Judith Kunzlé, April 2006
Article 2: Article 3: Article 4: Article 5: Article 6:
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