event noticeboard June 5 - 11

Pop CultureJune 5, 2025

Event noticeboard: Kite making, sequinned quilts and multi-sensory films

event noticeboard June 5 - 11

The Spinoff’s top picks of events from around the motu.

I have always wanted to taste tītī (and kererū, but that’s a different story). In photos I’ve seen those two little leg bones poking out of perfectly golden little bodies. The fact that they’re harvested annually from windy rocks in the cold Foveaux Strait makes them especially tantalising. Tītī can be bought brined and in buckets online but if I was to cook one myself I would never really know if I’d done it right. If I’m going to eat a delicacy, especially in the form of a little salty, fishy seabird, I want to know its just as intended. This is why I’m jealous of southerners this week. Those in Invercargill can treat themselves to a pre-Matariki feast of tītī and learn about the birds, islands, harvest and traditions at the same time at The Batch Cafe. I will have to settle for finally having tried something else I’ve had my eye on, cacio e pepe at Pici in Auckland. It was salty, and it looked like a bowl of worms. So fun to try new things!

spotlight

woman hugging a tree
Artist Alicia Courtney.

Workshop: Manu Raupō with Alicia Courtney

Hihiaua Cultural Centre, 56-58 Herekino Street, Whangārei
10am Saturday, June 7
Koha appreciated, registration needed

Māori kites are often called manu tukutuku, with tukutuku referring to the winding out of the line. They are flown to celebrate Matariki and are thought of as a way to communicate with loved ones who have died and a way to connect Papa and Rangi through flight. There were at least 17 different types of manu tukutuku before colonisation, but only three types have survived. Traditionally kites were decorated with feathers, shells, carved faces and red and black patterns. Some had long feather tails or rattling shells.

On Saturday morning you can make your very own kite from raupō (bulrush) in prepartion for Matariki with guidance from local artist Alicia Courtney (Pākehā). Courtney has spent time at Hoani Waititi Marae where she learned tikanga and became involved with Māori material culture. She has been guided by many kaumatua of Tai Tokerau. Her artistic practice is inspired by traditional Māori materials and methods and searches for a balance between respecting the technology of te ao tawhito (traditional Māori life and customs) with the necessity of living in te ao hurihuri (the contemporary world).

The workshop is part of a wider festival for Matariki called Pūanga. The following two events at Hihiaua are based on storytelling and look great too.

Te Ika-a-Māui

Paihia

illustration of marae with a guitar saying Ngati soul music

Music: Ngati Soul Music

Bad Habits, 76 Marsden Road, Paihia
6-9pm Friday, June 6
Free entry

Ngati Soul plays music for those that don’t just get wet, but feel the rain. He plays songs by Sublime, Otis Redding, Maroon 5 and more.

Matakana

two old men looking at a slip of paper with glee
Jean-Jean and Henri in The Scammers.

Film: The Scammers

Matakana Cinemas, 2 Matakana Valley Road, Matakana
10.30am Wednesday, June 11
$14 – $22

Bon soir! The French Film Festival is on nationwide, with heaps showing at the Matakana Cinemas. See the full programme here.

Tāmaki Makaurau

goth styled gig poster

Music: Junk Fest 2025

Double Whammy, downstairs at St Kevin’s Arcade, 183 Karangahape Road
8pm, Saturday, June 7
$35 – $50

Junk Fest sold out last year and is back with a siiiiick line up including Vera Ellen, Twine, Hōhā and Scrambline.

A colourful detailed and sequinned quilt

Visual art: Kokonga Ngākau by Maungarongo Te Kawa

Te Uru, 420 Titirangi Road, Titirangi, Auckland
10am-4.30pm daily
Free

Kokonga Ngākau includes five quilt figures: family members, deities, taniwha, merpeople. The title comes from the whakataukī “He kokonga whare e kitea, he kokonga ngākau e kore e kitea” (The corners of a house can be seen, but not the corners of the heart).

Tauranga

Chris parker on blue background

Comedy: Stop Being So Dramatic!

Baycourt Addison Theatre, 38 Durham Street, Tauranga
7.30pm Friday, June 6
$44 – $55

“I’m desperate to prove that I’m really chill and down to earth. So, what better way to get you to understand that than with a one-man variety hour spectacle chill stand-up comedy hour?”

Whakātane

people in the bush at night with torches

Walk: Whakatāne Kiwi Trust Night Walks

Ōhope Scenic Reserve, End of Burma Road, Ōhope, Whakatane
7pm Friday, June 6
$10 – $20

It isn’t likely you will see a wild kiwi, given they run a mile when they hear humans coming, but you will discover nocturnal creepy-crawlies like spiders and wētā and incredible glow-in-the-dark fungi.

Rotorua

two people on mountain ridge as sun sets
(Photo: Jordan Manoukian).

Film: Banff Mountain Film Festival World Tour

Sir Howard Morrison Centre, 1170 Fenton St, Rotorua
7pm Friday June 6
$25 – $31

More than two hours of inspiring action, environmental, cultural and adventure films from around the world.

Te Whanganui-a-Tara

young adult girls on the front porch of a house, one drinking a cup of tea another braiding hair

Theatre: Tūī Girls

Basement Theatre, Te Whaea – National Dance & Drama Centre, 11 Hutchison Road, Newtown
6.30pm and 4.30pm June 11-14

$15 – $25

Michaella Steel’s new play about a Nan returning to spend her last few days with her beloved mokos before te rerenga wairua.

Te Waipounamu

Blenheim

Music: NZSO Masterworks, Mozart & Beethoven

ASB Theatre Marlborough, 2 Hutcheson St, Blenheim
7pm Thursday, June 5
$48

“From the elegance of the classical era to the emotion of contemporary voices, Masterworks showcases the full power and beauty of live orchestral music.”

Kaikōura

Festival: Kaikōura Oceans Day Festival

Fyffe House, 62 Avoca Street, Kaikōura
10am Sunday, June 8
Free

Join Kaikōura Ocean Research Institute to celebrate World Ocean Day at Fyffe House.

Ōtautahi

Gemma Syme aka Instant Fantasy

Music and visual art: Instant Fantasy, 10th Anniversary of The Wet EP

Centre of Contemporary Art Toi Moroki, 66 Gloucester Street, Christchurch Central City
3.30pm, 5.30pm or 7.30pm Saturday, June 7
$7.50 – $15

Gemma Syme’s multimedia project explores how personas are constructed, documented, represented and ripped apart. For its anniversary The Wet EP has been reissued with new video work in collaboration with  Ōtautahi based artist Pentaloe.

Ōtepoti

foud people lying on blankets outside on the grass
Kite with the Wihanble S’a Center for Indigenous AI, Makȟóčhe Kiŋ Oíč’iwa (The Land Paints Itself) (still), Digital video, sound, 2025.

Film: Leap to the Place of Two Pools

Athenaeum Theatre, 23 The Octagon, Central Dunedin
6pm Friday, June 6
Free

Five new films embracing multi-sensorial knowledge systems by artists Kah Bee Chow, Selina Ershadi, Kite, Sonya Lacey and James Tapsell-Kururangi.

Invercargill

stylised illustration of a tītī flying with the words "bon apetītī"

Food, storytelling: Bon apetītī, a night of kai and kōrero

The Batch Cafe, 173 Spey Street, Invercargill
6pm Friday, June 6
$120

Join mahinga kai champion and storyteller Dan Tarrant, generous Ricky Fife and chef Ethan Flack for an evening of Tītī: a five-course meal, the birds, the islands, the harvest, the traditions and the whakapapa that binds it all.