Skip to content
Linking the city media arts presentation
Creativity and innovation are core pillars of success in any industry, and the demand for employees with creative skill-sets is high within the workforce.

About us

The Wintec School of Media Arts provides innovative, interdisciplinary education that prepares students for careers in creative industries.

Our programmes are all about creativity. We inspire students to problem solve from day one; connecting with industry specialists and mentors, and tailoring learning through real-life projects. We work alongside students to challenge them to be as creative as they can be while reaching their goals.

Take a look inside

Explore student life at Wintec School of Media Arts.

Are you interested to learn more about the experiences of our Media Arts students here at the Hamilton City Campus? Check out the videos below and follow us on social media.

Study with us

Now is the time to turn your creativity into a career.

Be part of a creative community and be inspired by the people around you. Access the latest technology at your fingertips, experience industry-respected tutors by your side and when you graduate, an internationally recognised qualification to set you on your way.

Pathways

Subject areas

Courses

Art and design programmes

Communication programmes

Music and performing arts programmes

Get involved

Be part of our community and see how we can work together. We are passionate about creating a world where Kirikiriroa/Hamilton City Campus is renowned for its thriving, culturally dynamic, creative community. Our mission: create opportunities for inspired ways of learning, for connecting and networking, that all contribute to an arts-active city. Hāere Mai! Join us!

A placeholder image, 556 by 313 pixels
Secondary Schools

Are you from the secondary school sector? Find out what you and your students can experience at Media Arts.

A placeholder image, 556 by 313 pixels
Internships and projects

Do you need an intern or have a work opportunity or project? Our students have a variety of skills and expertise which could help you.

Ruby Nyika seated at Ramp Gallery
The Waikato Independent

The Waikato Independent is an online student project which aims to cover newsworthy events through Waikato and beyond.

Interior design studio
Ramp Journal

Here at this blog, you will find stories to inspire and resources to inform. Topics about music, creative media, arts, and design straight from the experts are just some of the things you will uncover here.

NELL LET THERE BE ROBE exhibition
Ramp Gallery

Ramp is a contemporary art gallery, situated in the heart of Hamilton City at the Wintec School of Media Arts.

Ramp Festival presentation
Ramp Festival
Bringing together artists, musicians, arts practitioners, educators, professionals, academics, students, and the public, Ramp Festival provides an annual platform for dynamic discussions, sharing of new ideas and opportunities to put these into practice.

Visit us today

Would you like to experience a tour of the School of Media Arts facilities?

Contact us via email to arrange a time. A tour takes about 35-45 minutes.

View the School of Media Arts map

 

News

New film depicts nuclear issues as a problem for humanity

Filmmaker John Mandelberg (right) with  cinematographer and director sound recordist Nicholas Sherman

Filmmaker John Mandelberg (right) discussing the next shot with Australian cinematographer Nicholas Sherman.

Waikato Institute of Technology (Wintec) academic and filmmaker John Mandelberg is about to release a new film, Totem & Ore, a story about the past and the present, that connects nuclear issues in Australia and Japan.

Totem & Ore gives context to the effects of the atomic bomb on the population of Hiroshima in 1945 up until today, comparing those atomic survivors with indigenous communities in Australia who were affected by 1950’s British nuclear testing of 12 atomic weapons and 500 various minor trials on Aboriginal land.

Mandelberg who teaches filmmaking at Wintec School of Media Arts, directed, produced and edited the film which also features the musical talent of composer and Wintec Music and Performing Arts Manager, David Sidwell and sound design from Wintec academic Kent Macpherson.Totem & Ore is animated by Wintec alumni Dawn Tuffery, the camera assistant is Wintec honours student, Paige Larianova with voice over sound recording by Wintec Music Technician, Brad Morgan.

It has been an epic, yet rewarding journey for Mandelberg who is making plans to show the film in Australia and New Zealand after its world premiere at the Hiroshima International Film Festival on 24 November this year.

“In 2016, I was working across Hiroshima, Melbourne, Sydney and central Australia in between teaching at Wintec in New Zealand.”

In 1995, Mandelberg released a film on the double life of writer B. Wongar who became the inspiration for Totem & Ore.

“I was fascinated by his story. He was from Eastern Europe and wrote fiction like an Aboriginal about the clash between white people and Aborigines. His first three novels became known as ‘the nuclear trilogy’ and they told a grim story about the testing that took place in the 1950s. He showed that uranium dislocated communities where testing took place.”

“Wongar published a non-fiction book called Totem & Ore where he wrote about the tragedy of uranium exploration and Britain nuclear testing against Aboriginal people.”

In 2014 Mandelberg made a pilot based on Wongar’s book to help fund the film. Funding for Totem & Ore came in part from Wongar, through Mandelberg’ s own resources and a research grant sourced through Wintec.

Totem & Ore is not a replication of Wongar’s book. I needed to get a context for the Australian story and that was the first nuclear weapon to be dropped on a community.

 “I wanted to make a film to tell the story about the past and the present. The events at Hiroshima and more recently, Fukushima are good bookends for the nuclear story.”

Filmmaker John Mandelberg in Hiroshima directing an interview with Haruko Moritaki, Executive Director World Nuclear Victims ForumJohn Mandelberg in Hiroshima directing an interview with Haruko Moritaki, Executive Director World Nuclear Victims Forum, with Professor Tomoko Ichitani translating.

The film starts in 1945 with the Hiroshima bombing and ends with the Fukushima nuclear meltdown in 2011. Mandelberg says the Americans shut down Japanese writing about the atomic bomb after the second world war.

“Truman was convinced this was the way to save the world and stop the war, but the Japanese were making contact to surrender.”

“In 1945, the Hiroshima bomb was detonated above a hospital and in nine minutes 90,000 people died. For me, I felt this was a story that needed to be told again and again.

“The last bomb was dropped on Nagasaki in 1945 but there are nuclear tests going on all the time. In April 2016, when we were researching this film, it had only been 90 days since the last test.”

Professor Robert Jacobs, Hiroshima City University Peace Institute recently reviewed Totem & Ore.

“So many films on nuclear issues have the quality of hitting the viewer over the head with the imperatives and brutalities of the history. This work really does a great job of presenting everyone as human beings living lives of integrity and exploring the history and legacy of these events.”

Totem & Ore will become part of the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum collection.

Totem & Ore actor Ursula Yovich at the Hiroshima Peace MuseumAustralian Aboriginal actress Ursula Yovich at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum during the filming of Totem & Ore.

About John Mandelberg
For more than 30 years, John Mandelberg worked in Australian film and television. He taught at the National Film School in Australia before moving to Hamilton in 2003, to teach Moving Image at Wintec’s School of Media Arts, where he continues to teach across all multiple degrees.

John has written academic articles, made drama and documentary works, experimental films and wrote the libretto for the musical, Tales of Nikolai Gogol, along with composer, David Sidwell, and orchestrator Wayne Senior. It was performed in New Zealand in 2014 at the Clarence Street Theatre and highlights at the Hamilton Gardens Arts Festival. As a researcher, much of his filmmaking output relates to his ongoing research. His work has been seen all over the world, at film festivals, on television and online.

Read more
A window into the world of Media Arts students
Activate your creativity by learning from the best
Hollie Smith returns to Wintec

Events

No events.

Wintec is part of Te Pūkenga - New Zealand Institute of Skills and Technology Learn More

Learn with purpose

Explore Te Pūkenga

Te Kāwanatanga o Aotearoa - New Zealand Government

Te Kāwanatanga o Aotearoa - New Zealand Government

Copyright © 2022 Wintec