Margaret Aull is a New Zealand painter, art manager, and curator. She works in mixed media using canvas, installations and sculpture to contribute to and comment on MÃÂori and Pacific artistic discourse. Her work has been exhibited both nationally and internationally, showcasing work at the Casablanca Biennale, Morocco in 2018.
Along with her own art practice she is an advocate for MÃÂori arts, serving as an advisor on Te Atinga MÃÂori Visual Arts Board, Creative New Zealand, Hamilton City Council Arts Advisory Forum and Creative Waikato's MÃÂori Arts Advisory Group.
Aull studied MÃÂori and Pacific arts at Te WÃÂnanga o Aotearoa. In 2008 she completed her Bachelor of Media Arts at Waikato Institute of Technology. For her Masters she studied at Whitecliffe College of Arts and Design. Her thesis investigated "the notion of tapu/tabu (sacredness) in relation to objects as visual representations of ancestors and gods."
Her first solo exhibition in 2008 was titled Na Kena Yali and was held at the Chartwell Gallery in Hamilton. She has produced two further solo exhibitions in 2013 and 2014. Her second solo exhibition was titled Concealed Ancestors and was shown at Papakura Art Gallery. Her third was held at OREXART in Auckland.
In 2017 she exhibited alongside fellow artist-curator Nigel Borell in their joint exhibition Karanga Hokianga which was shown at Village Arts Gallery, Hokianga.
In 2018 she exhibited her work in a show called âÂÂA Maternal Lensâ which was held at Casablanca Biennale, Morocco. This exhibition was curated by Ema Tavola and also included the works of Julia MageâÂÂau Gray, Leilani Kake, Kolokesa MÃÂhina-Tuai and Vaimaila Urale. Her work in this exhibition was titled <nowiki/>'Tai Aroha and was made from PÃÂua. The title references a waiata that describes love like a tide that ebbs and flows. Aull describes it as "when one tide is out, the other is full; it is a synthesising relationship of how I acknowledge the two cultural foundations as a body of water."
Aull was appointed to Te ÃÂtinga in 2016, a contemporary MÃÂori visual arts committee. As part of this committee she serves as an advocate for MÃÂori artists.
She is also part of The Veiqia Project, a creative research project investigating the practice of Veiqia that was founded in 2015. The work of the Veiqia Project includes shared research, public events and exhibitions. One of these exhibitions was iLakolako ni weniqia: a Veiquia project which was shown at the Physics Room in Christchurch.
Aull is of MÃÂori (Te Rarawa, Tà «wharetoa) and Fijian descent.