Morgan
Hogg

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Morgan Hogg, Ariki Vaine, 2021. Video. Courtesy the artist.
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Morgan Hogg, Ariki Vaine (Film Still), 2021. Video. Courtesy the artist.
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Ariki Vaine is a two-part video series reflecting the story and importance of Mother Earth through Cook Island dance. The video talks to the importance of cultural linage and the connection to our ancestors. Ariki Vaine displays a graciousness toward the leaders of our culture, women. The work engages with the disconnection of being biracial, and the importance of connecting with our heritage to understand self.

The two videos, Māmā and Maine, create a conversational barrier through language and movement, between the past and the future. Utilising performance as a universal language of storytelling. The work highlights the importance of maintaining indigenous cultures that are being lost through a colonised world.

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Morgan Hogg, Ariki Vaine (Film Still), 2021. Video. Courtesy the artist.
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Morgan Hogg, Ranginui + Papatūānuku, 2021. Video Installation, 2.6 x 2.1m. Courtesy the artist. Photo: Document Photography.
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Ranginui + Papatūānuku is an immersive installation, reflecting upon the Polynesian cultural connection toward the land and sea. This work encapsulates the importance of spirituality within the Oceanic culture, highlighted through traditional storytelling dance. The primal source of life, the sea, is symbolically displayed as a freestanding water wall. It is the collaboration of sound, performance, and the representation of water, that educates the audience upon the Polynesian belief systems and traditional practices. Ranginui + Papatūānuku evidently creates an individual’s experience with understanding a spiritual connectivity with their surroundings.

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Morgan Hogg, Ranginui + Papatūānuku, 2021. Video Installation, 2.6 x 2.1m. Courtesy the artist. Photo: Document Photography.
Right
Morgan Hogg, Ranginui + Papatūānuku, 2021. Video Installation, 2.6 x 2.1m. Courtesy the artist. Photo: Document Photography.
Left
Morgan Hogg, Ranginui + Papatūānuku, 2021. Video Installation, 2.6 x 2.1m. Courtesy the artist. Photo: Document Photography.
Top
Morgan Hogg, Ranginui + Papatūānuku, 2021. Video Installation, 2.6 x 2.1m. Courtesy the artist. Photo: Document Photography.
Bottom
Morgan Hogg, Ranginui + Papatūānuku, 2021. Video Installation, 2.6 x 2.1m. Courtesy the artist. Photo: Document Photography.
Right

Bio

Morgan Hogg is an artist based on unceded Dhurag land. She is currently studying a Bachelor of Visual Arts specialising in Screen Arts and a Bachelor of Advanced Studies majoring in Film Studies, at Sydney College of the Arts.

Through the perspective of her Indigenous Cook Island and Anglo-Saxon heritage, Hogg utilises installations as a visual representation of the ongoing issues within the Pacific islands and Indigenous cultures in the Southern Hemisphere.

Milk Acid

Gabrielle
Cook

Vanessa
Lin

Gia
Biocca

The Maths Problem

Anastasia
Karageorge

Unfair Love ​

Benita
Laylim

Alexandra
Jonscher

Maria
Ochoa

Lucy
Thurston

Ida
Combley

Omi
Shen

Grace
Gao

Astrid
Xie

Morgan
Hogg

Judy
Lin

Mila
Feng

Jessica
Lu

Hansul
Park

Shurong
Shi

Kiara
Sarusi

Cherise
Yang

Anna
Tago

Helinda
Yu

Róisín
Spencer

Sinta
Wijaya

Yixi
Lin

Happy Birthday

Max
Durham

Clement
Kwok

So Long

Rachel
Feng

Sarah
Drew

Fuchen
Xu

The Silent Voice

Charlene
Qu

Morgan
Wang

Jihoo
Yoon

Causality

Isabelle Bianca
Virrey

Edwina
Darling

The Medal

China Dialect

Zitong
Wang

Nami
Taylor

Charne
Greyling

Gabe
Wahl

The Circle 

Asset 1

Emily
Yu

Sunnie
Cao

Zhiqing
Peng

Walk Out

Keesha Catherine
Field

Grace
Chung

Bronte
Cormican-Jones

Jan
Garben

Harper
Zhu

Pengfan
Lin