Home » Shop » Umu Feast by To’a Sāleilua

Umu Feast by To’a Sāleilua

T75.00

Close
Price Summary
  • T75.00
  • T75.00
  • T75.00
In Stock
Highlights:

This print by To’a Sāleilua shows a steaming Samoan feast of pork, fish, breadfruit, taro and more, which are cooked using traditional methods.

Do you feel this product is perfect for a friend or a loved one? You can buy a gift card for this item! Gift this product
Compare
24 People viewing this product right now!
Category: Tags: ,
Description

This is a digital print download. When you buy a digital download, we send you an email with a link containing instructions about how to download your print. You will receive a link to a 300 DPI printable image in a PDF or JPG file. Simply download and save the file. You can print your wall art at home, your local print shop, or through an online printing service.

You can print your artwork as many times as you like as long as it is for personal use.This print is copyrighted and cannot be used commercially in any way. It is for your personal use only. If you wish to use the digital print commercially, you can contact the artist for their fee to purchase a commercial license.  Please respect the artist’s rights.

This digital file can be printed on paper, canvas, wood, metal. For paper prints, for best results, we recommend using 200gsm cardstock in matte or semi-gloss finish. If printing at home, ensure the printer’s color correction is disabled and that it is set to print at ‘original size.’
Unless specified otherwise, all art has been formatted to a 4:3 aspect ratio to enable printing in various common sizes (aspect ratio is the relationship between the width and height of an image). Your new wall art can be printed in the following sizes: 6 x 8in / 15 x 20cm, 9 x 12in / 22 x 30cm, 12 x 16in / 30 x 40cm, 15 x 20in / 38 x 50cm, 18 x 24in / 45 x 60cm, 24 x 32in / 60 x 80cm and 30 x 40in / 75 x 100cm.
Reviews (0)
0 ★
0 Ratings
5 ★
0
4 ★
0
3 ★
0
2 ★
0
1 ★
0

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Umu Feast by To’a Sāleilua”

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Vendor Info

Vendor Information

  • Store Name: Nikki Mariner
  • Vendor: Nikki Mariner
  • No ratings found yet!
More Products

Lady Fingers | Misiluki

Highlights:
  • I was staring at banana trees when I started painting this and deciding on a colour palette.

Yellows, greens and browns. Not colours I usually use but you can’t argue with nature’s beauty.

Then the title just seemed so obvious and perfect.

Misiluki is Samoan for Lady Finger bananas.
Lady Fingers. Five digits on a hand and five is the number of sisters I paint over and over again.

This bunch of five sisters are all grown up.

 

NewFeatured

Suga Skull by Pele Loi

Highlights:

Pele paints a contemporary visualisation of icons of Samoan culture. The tanoa becomes a crown, a tuiga made of tatau symbols, flowing ribbons of elei, and flowers adorn a skull.

The Cleaner

Highlights:

The first painting of every year is significant.
It sets the tone, mood, style, and benchmark for the year.

The Cleaner was my first for 2024.

It’s a figurative painting of a woman with a broom.
She wears only a lavalava and a sei.

Inspirations.

1. I fell in love with a sculpture by Italian artist Ernesto Coter while eating in his kitchen at Santa Maria Rezzonico a few weeks earlier. The sculpture was sitting on the sideboard beside his dining table. He said it is a Samoan woman dancing. This painting is a response to the sculpture (Pic 5)

2. A new year inspires a fresh look at life, reassessment, and decluttering. It’s not the first time my first painting for a new year has included a broom. It’s about spring cleaning your life as a new year begins.

3. Spending time with my family gave me a fresh respect for two of my sisters who each successfully run their own cleaning businesses in Queensland. It’s more interesting and complex work than I expected, and what they do for their clients is admirable.
I wanted to honour cleaners so I painted gold behind her head to show she is iconic.
And she had a gold broom.

4. Samoans sweep everything regularly – the beach, the grass the house, and everything.

5. A woman with a broom is a timeless and common sight in the background of every culture and every age. I want to uplift and highlight this symbol.
As a goddess. With an iconic halo.
We have often been this person and often see this person. And they’re important and essential.
They get rid of crap and they make the world more beautiful.
Goddesses.

6. I painted a blue ocean type background because I was seeing a lot from the 2023 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Dubai, while painting. Many people I know were there representing island nations of the Pacific Ocean.

 

Fa’asamoa by William Mauola

Highlights:

This print by William Mauola includes ceremonial items of Samoan culture displayed in a tanoa against the background of tatau patterns.

It includes a nifo oti, ulafala, to’oto’o, fue and an aute/a red hibiscus.

Me Time

Highlights:

 

This painting is about trying to capture the individual experience of looking inside for clarity and truth and looking outside for strength or inspiration.

I painted it as I was learning to meditate.

An unlikely sources of artistic inspiration in this depiction of a Samoan woman is mosque architecture.

 

Mamanu by Pele Loi

Highlights:

This print features traditional Samoan patterns and symbols found in our siapo (tapa cloth) and tatau (tattoos).

Scroll To Top
Close
Close

My Cart

Shopping cart is empty!

Continue Shopping

Select at least 2 products
to compare