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

The digital view through a Māori lens

Kereama Taepa builds on the rich history of Māori as innovators through his art

Rotorua-based artist and teacher Kereama Taepa’s work builds on the rich history of Māori as innovators. His exhibition, Te Ao Mariko is at Ramp Gallery, Wintec in Hamilton from 23 October-13 November.

It starts with an itch, a yearning to touch clay or create. For Taepa, this is the driver, often into the early hours, before he is up again early, to the call of fatherhood and work.

 “What gets me up every day? First and foremost I want to show my children that if they want to achieve something they have to be courageous and just chase it without fear of rejection or not achieving - I suppose I'm just trying my best to be a good role model for them.”

This itch, he says is the difference. It generates momentum in his pursuit to continue the rich tradition of innovation from his Māori ancestors.

“There’s a tradition of innovation in Māoridom. Our ancestors travelled and had to adapt to new and ever-changing environments that were at first completely new to them. I am inspired by the way they had to invent and innovate to survive in the new environments they found themselves in.”

Digital technology is a driver for Taepa and his exhibition at Ramp Gallery, Te Ao Mariko translates to "The Virtual World”.

“In essence, Te Ao Mariko is an exhibition that explores the tradition of innovation through digital technologies and digital spaces.”

His studio is a MacBook on the kitchen table and when he is ready to print, he will clear some space on the kitchen bench. From there comes the result of innovation.  Tukutuku (weaving) may be represented by pixels and he creates forms in 3D designed digital carving.

Detail orange hei tiki, Kereama Taepa for Te Ao Mariko at Ramp GalleryDetail from a work for Te Ao Mariko, an orange hei tiki, digitally printed in ply which explores digital technologies and whakairo.


Taepa has exhibited national and internationally and creating accessible work is important to him.  

“I love to take our mahi [work] into places and spaces and be relevant,” he says.

His public sculptures include an installation at Te Papa in Wellington, a public work in New Plymouth and external works for toilet blocks in Whakarewarewa Forest and the Redwoods in Rotorua.

“I am mindful of those who struggle with their identity and sense of belonging. I want to bring more Māori art into our public places and spaces so that they feel a sense of belonging through seeing their culture.”

In a recent interview in the Ramp podcast series he says, “Being an artist was not really a choice”.

He grew up in an artistic family with a Pākehā mum and a Māori dad.

“We were drawing and painting from an early age. Grandma was a painter on my mother’s side and my dad taught carving in prisons.

“Every time we were in the studio with Dad, we were carving, working with clay, with mud on our hands. I was more interested in the 3D side of things, my brother was a painter.”

He didn’t grow up knowing much about mātauranga Māori – he learned a lot at school and at university where he studied Māori visual arts.

“In terms of my art I am happy being both and why can’t we be both? For me I have come to terms with that through my art and expressing that notion that I am both Māori and Pākehā and I am okay with that. You can belong in both worlds.”

See more of Taepa’s work at  kereamataepa.co.nz

Find out more about Te Ao Mariko at Ramp Gallery, Wintec in Hamilton from 23 October-13 November.

Listen to the Ramp Connect podcast, Kereama Taepa: Go hard! an interview with Aimie Cronin. 

Read more:
Wintec students weave learning and experience at Te Pūkenga launch
Researcher is taking taonga puoro to new places at Wintec
One man, one camera and the liberation of limitation

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