-
Manage No, Sortation, Country, Writer ,Date, Copyright Manage No SS00000145 Stakeholder Category Expert Country Samoa Affiliated institution Tiapapata Art Centre, Inc. Position Managing Trustee

Description | Graduating in 1980 with a Bachelor of Business Studies from Massey University in New Zealand, Galumalemana has always been most interested in art, cultural heirtage and human rights. In 2006, together with his wife Wendy, they established the Tiapapata Art Centre Inc., a charitable trust promoting traditional and contemporary arts and crafts in Samoa. He has amassed an extensive photographic and video record of many of Samoa’s most iconic expressions of material culture and has been associated as a Research Fellow to the National University of Samoa on gender issues. | ||
---|---|---|---|
Phone(Office) | 7519273 | Mobile | 7663394 |
steven.percival@gmail.com |
Information source
Materials related to
Article
더보기-
DI00000094
TIAPAPATA ART CENTRE, PROMOTING A SAMOAN LEGACY
In June 2012, Samoa celebrated its fiftieth year of independence. It was the first Pacific island country to gain independence, and the Polynesians living in this small group of islands have been bequeathed with a rich and distinguished cultural heritage.
Galumalemana Steven Percival Director, Tiapapata Art Centre 2012 -
DI00000449
Film Documentaries on Samoan Traditional Crafts
The Samoan government’s efforts to revitalize fine mat weaving (‘ie sae) and the making of siapo or tapa, a bark cloth art, now includes a series of short films describing the processes. The film series was commissioned by the Ministry of Women, Community, and Social Development and produced by Galumalemana Steven Percival, a local filmmaker and ICHCAP correspondent. The documentary films in the Samoan language provide viewers with a glimpse into how these cultural products continue to be used in Samoan society. These traditional crafts are full of esoteric knowledge and lie at the bedrock of Samoa’s rich intangible cultural heritage. Here is a short video from the series. Youtube: https://youtu.be/Ccuf67O3Gos Photo : Makers of Samoan siapo or tapa use traditional knowledge for dyes and fixatives ©Galumalemana Steven Percival
STEVEN PERCIVAL 2017