From My Lips To Yours: Exploring Poetry Through The Lens of Reciprocity.  

Led by Dani Kionasina

Thurs 7 November 2024

6 pm – 8 pm

Tautai, Level 1, 300 Karangahape Rd, Auckland 1010

From My Lips To Yours: Exploring Poetry Through The Lens of Reciprocity was a free poetry workshop in collaboration with KBA’s Art Late.

Participants joined Samoan (Falealili, Falelatai)/Welsh writer, poet, journalist, kaiako and multidisciplinary artist Dani Kionasina for an evening of Moana art and upu (words).

The workshop explored the art of writing—they embarked on the process of gathering upu in response to the Solesolevaki exhibition. Guided by their senses and relationships, their writing will explored the theme of reciprocity. Through talanoa, creativity and community building, Dani Kionasina offered awhi (support) as they navigated the exercises.

About Dani Kionasina

Danielle Kionasina Dilys Thomson is a Samoan (Falealili, Falelatai)/Welsh writer, poet, journalist, kaiako and multidisciplinary artist based in Tāmaki Makaurau. She is also the founder and director of Tagata Atamai and the Moana Creative Business Network. Both projects aim to amplify voices of the Moana through community, culture and creativity. 
 
In 2024, Danielle was commissioned by Nevertheless Trust to create a visual art display of her poem ‘Ie Lavalava’ for the Arts and Culture Festival of the Rainbow Games. During that same year, Danielle's writing was selected to be included in a range of publications including Salient, Bad Apple, Overcom and Awa Wahine's Papatūānuku Collection. As a result of her promising contributions to the storytelling landscape in Aotearoa, Danielle was profiled in Rima Magazine: Awa Wahine and selected to participate in the pilot Pōkai Tuhi wānanga. 
 
Danielle's debut poetry collection, Tusitala, was published by Tagata Atamai in September 2024. This book was written for "the mothers who whispered wisdom into my ears, aunties who slipped twenty-dollar notes into my hands and sisters who cackled with me into the night. These poems are an archive of the lives we have lived together. They are eternal—like us." Through art and upu, Danielle hopes to "facilitate connection, healing and the preservation of sacred cultural knowledge.”