色诱直播

Ringa Toi

An annual exhibition showcasing the artwork of secondary school students with a focus on Toi M膩ori and Pacific Arts at Excellence level

He toi tupu, he toi ora, he toi i ahu mai i Hawaiki.

Tomokia ki te whare o Toi. Ko te whare nei i parua iho ki te muka r膩whiti, ki te neko, ki te kaitaka, ki te pakipaki 鈥 hei m膩takitaki m艒 te ao wh膩nui e.

Ringa Toi is an annual exhibition that showcases student artwork with a focus on Toi M膩ori and Pacific Arts at Excellence level. 

The exhibition includes a range of art across 7 categories:

  • Toi Wharepora (contemporary and traditional weaving forms)
  • Toi Whakairo (carving)
  • Toi Matihiko (digital print where the reproduction processes have been completed by computer)
  • Toi Matatuhi (printmaking such as intaglio)
  • Toi Waituhi (paint, ink, and drawing)
  • Toi Matarau (shaping and fashioning)
  • Toi Whakaahua (photography with no digital manipulation)
  • Kaupapa Pasifika (Pasifika artwork). 

Ringa Toi is recognised as a vehicle to enhance student engagement, achievement and encourage retention at school. It also provides a platform to advance the use of m膩tauranga M膩ori and Pacific knowledges and is a tool to accelerate M膩ori and Pacific learner success.

Each year 膩konga from around Aotearoa submit artwork. Artwork in the exhibition is judged based on 7 categories and we present awards for Highly Commended and Commended winners. Exhibition visitors can also vote for the People鈥檚 Choice Award recipient.

Ringa Toi Exhibition 2025: Celebrating 10 years

The 2025 Ringa Toi student exhibition, the 10th anniversary, ran from 15 to 28 September 2025 at Te Papa Tongarewa 鈥 Museum of New Zealand. 

Category award winners in 2025

View the Highly Commended and Commended winners for Ringa Toi 2025:

2025 category award winners

Who can exhibit artwork at Ringa Toi?

Ringa Toi is open to all secondary school and wharekura students working towards NCEA levels 1 to 3, with a focus on Toi M膩ori and Pacific Art works at Excellence level.

This may include mahi from courses and subjects like Visual Arts, Photography, Sculpture, Toi Ataata, Whakairo, Ng膩 Mahi a te Whare Pora, and Niue Arts & Crafts.

膧konga don't have to be studying an arts-based course to take part in Ringa Toi. For example, mahi from courses and subjects based on culture (such as Te Ao Haka, M膩ori Performing Arts and Mau R膩kau) where 膩konga create their own wearable pieces like a maro or korowai, or Textiles and Design where 膩konga might make kete, can be exhibited.

2024 Ringa Toi student exhibition

The 2024 Ringa Toi Exhibition was held at Te Papa Tongarewa in Wellington from 12 to 27 September 2024.

Over 150 toi M膩ori and Pasifika artworks by 123 膩konga from 45 secondary schools and kura were on display

Download the 2024 Ringa Toi exhibition catalogue [PDF, 50 MB]

2024 feature category: 'Te M膩ori'

In 2024 we featured a new artwork category to celebrate the 40th Anniversary of the 鈥楾e M膩ori鈥 Exhibition. There was a separate award for this category.

More than 40 artworks submitted were created for this category to celebrate the spiritual essence and heart of Te M膩ori (Te Hokinga Mai 鈥 The Return Home) 40-year anniversary.

Category award winners 2024

View the Highly Commended and Commended winners for Ringa Toi 2024.

2024 category award winners

Video transcript

[Screen shows students and guests entering and walking around the exhibition space. The music playing in the background is a karakia]

[Streme Clark from Pukehoke High School speaks to the camera]

Streme: The opening was really beautiful. I think it was special.

It really brought us all together as M膩ori. Just to celebrate something like this.

[Screen shows guests taking a seat and hearing from a speaker]

[Taipuna Leon Kipa] from Waitakere College speaks to the camera]

Taipuna: I've never been to Te Papa, and to be in an exhibition at Te Papa,

it鈥檚 crazy and I woke up like 2.30 this morning just to get here with my mum.

[William Sauaso-Rasch speaks to the camera]

William: Why things like this are important is it really showcases how talented we are.

And I feel like there's almost a stereotype in other places, that we aren't what we actually

are, which is talented, smart, brainy.

[Screen shows close ups of student artwork, Ava is speaking in the background]

Ava: I feel really proud. It's actually really cool to see it up

[Ava Rule from Pukekohe High School speaks to the camera]

Ava: Because obviously we do a lot of work and then it kind of just ends up on your board.

It doesn't really get seen. So it's cool to see it hung up for people to see.

[Jacob Paul from 艑t膩huhu speaks to the camera]

Jacob: The wood was actually just sitting in our workshop. It was just laying around and it

had a massive knot at the top bulging out.

[Screen shows a close-up of Jacob鈥檚 carving]

Jacob: And I saw this like story about one of my tupuna, nd that's what it represents. This is one of my tupuna here. He's a warrior from back home, from Te Teko.

[Patrick Lemeki from Rosmini College speaks to the camera]

Patrick: The overall inspiration for my piece was to educate people of my generation about

our past and about where we are in the present.

[Screen shows a close-up of Patrick鈥檚 painting]

Patrick: Because I think that it's important that, you know, without knowing your past, knowing your heritage and present, you don't know where you're going in the future.

[Screen shows a close-up of an image. Te Tiale is speaking in the background]

Te Tiale: I decided to do this photo because I felt really distant to my heritage.

[Te Tiale Tulafono from Pukekohe High School speaks to the camera]

Te Tiale: This is my nephew in the photo, I decided to photograph him just because he's always asking questions about where we're from. My dad got gifted with these vaka from his uncle who made them, and I decided to put it in the photo just to show his connection to his past.

[Taine Hinga from Rotoruna Boys鈥 High School speaks to the camera]

Taine: So this painting was named 弄kaip艒. And this painting is about me trying to reconnect with my roots, since I believe that I am somewhat disconnected from my roots.

I'm trying to find my way back to being M膩ori.

It's really cool because this is the first year that we've ever done this for boys鈥 high, and to get one of my paintings submitted in the first year we done it is pretty, pretty mean, I guess.

[Screen shows a korowai]

[Taipua speaks to the camera]

Taipua: So here we have 鈥楾e K膩kahu Oneone鈥 loosely translated 鈥楾he Cloak of Soil鈥. Here we have a t膩niko pattern that I inherited from my grandmother. She is a kait膩niko and each of these little crosses represent the mycelium fungus and microbes in the soil.

Here we have hoheria, which is lace bark, p墨ngao, and neinei. Those are all plants of the forest.

This piece represents the importance of the ngahere and the soil.

[Ava speaks to the camera]

Ava: Yeah I love my family. So there's like pieces with my uncle and my cousins and then also me and my nana. So it was kind of like exploring the connection between him and his family. And then obviously where we all connect back to at our marae and our maunga.

[Screen shows a close-up of a reimaged Monopoly board]

[Steme speaks to the camera]

Streme: T奴rangawaewae to me is our land, and then I just thought about how our land is not really ours anymore. So that's why I put everything in M膩ori. And then these houses are a representation of the Queens monopoly over it.

[Patrick speaks to the camera]

Patrick: I think the main purpose of art is to convey a message to people. I also think it is powerful for giving you like a sense of identity and also connecting you with like you know, your heritage and future at the same time.

[Screen shows the students standing in front of artworks]

[Taipuna is speaking in the background]

Taipuna: Get in there and find something that you're interested in. So you have the longing

to want to keep on doing it.

[Taine speaks to the camera]

Taine: Just go for it. Really. Straight up your artwork is what you see it as and like, you can spread your own spin on everything if you just share with everyone.

[William is speaking in the background while the screen shows close-ups of artworks]

William: Don't hold back, do it. Literally do not worry or care about anyone else and what they think. If you don't know them personally, why take what they think personally?

Just do it. You do not want to be restrained from other people. You know. Live your life the way you want to live it.

And so this is the outcome, as I'm here with my work on a wall in Te Papa Museum, so thank you so much.

[Video ends]

Meet student artists from the 2024 exhibition (4:16 mins)

膧konga exhibiting at Ringa Toi share some information about their work, and what the exhibition means to them.

2023 Ringa Toi student exhibition 鈥 celebrating student success

Over 154 artworks from 膩konga across Aotearoa were exhibited at Te Papa in 2023.

We appreciate the support of our sponsors for the 2023 Ringa Toi Student Exhibition 鈥 The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Creative New Zealand, and Toi M膩ori Aotearoa.

You can view all the student artwork exhibited last year in the catalogue below.

Download the 2023 Ringa Toi Exhibition catalogue [PDF, 53 MB]

Category award winners 2023

View the Highly Commended and Commended winners for Ringa Toi 2023.

2023 category award winners

Student artwork galleries

Questions?

If you have any p膩tai about the exhibition, please email the Ringa Toi team

Follow us on Facebook to hear about the latest news and information