Rhythm and Vines adds SuperGrans Tairāwhiti Trust as charity partner
It follows Rhythm and Vines (R&V) fundraising more than $40,000 for the Gisborne Mayoral Flood Relief over the past two years.
'Rhythm and Vines is proud to announce a new

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The Spinoff
11-07-2025
- The Spinoff
The top 20 moments from the DIVA exhibition at Auckland Museum, ranked
Bow down bitches, the true divas are in town. This week in attention economy news, JoJo Siwa is threatening to release her cover of 'Bette Davis Eyes' on Spotify. In the short video she's already released, she sounds like she's swallowed three packets of cigs and auto tuned the raspy result. She looks like she wants to fuck around and find out what being a tradwife is. Turning what I assume are her own Bette Davis eyes towards the camera as several strands of pearls threaten to engulf her head, it's clear her Gene Simmons, Karma era is over. This is what everyone is talking about right now. Next week, it will be something else. In 2025, new viral obsessions are spawned, devoured and pronounced dead within 24 hours. The average human attention span is about eight seconds, which is a perfect capsule for everyone's six seconds of fame. Everything is new, yet nothing truly is. We've never been more immersed in celebrity gossip, commentary, and access. We've also never been so context-poor and so deprived of enduring cultural meaning. Meeting this moment is DIVA, an exhibition developed by the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) in London, currently housed at Auckland Museum until October. It's the perfect example of what a museum exhibition should be in 2025. It is accessible and relevant, brimming with pop culture references and real-life spectacle you just can't experience during your daily scrolls. It presents serious hypotheses about gender, the tension between attention and exposure and the true meaning of genius and celebrity. Most importantly, it reminds us that we all stand on the shoulders of giants and that cultural connective tissue binds our past to our present. It's also a welcome boon for the museum. Two of its most popular attractions have been closed indefinitely due to the detection of asbestos, adding another item to Wayne Brown's 'Fix Auckland' list. Here are the top 20 moments ranked according to historical significance, pop culture heft and spectacle, with a few subjective calls based on when I cried, gasped and flamed with joy. 20. Exit through the gift shop The museum and gallery trick of forcing you to leave through the gift shop at the end of an exhibition might be one of my all-time favourite retail strategies. I always end up buying something. DIVA is no different. Nobody needs a $300 pair of diamante-studded glasses from Elton John's line of eyewear, but did I stop and try them on? Yes. Will I be back to purchase some prints of Nina Simone, Grace Jones, and Benny and the Jets era Elton? Absolutely. My love of retail strategy is also niche, hence the lower ranking. To be clear, the rare gems are located in the exhibition, not the shop. 19. Barbra and the purple extravaganza from Funny Girl It's the dress and the coat. So much chiffon. 18. Finding your own diva There's a red carpet and many spots for posing. I did mine in the gift shop, you do you hunny diva child. 17. The full arc of Maria Callas Two of Callas's most iconic costumes are displayed together – her blue dress from her 1952 London debut in Norma and the red gown from her final stage performance in Tosca (1965). Diva is an Italian word, and the exhibition explores its origin, weaponisation and reclamation. None of that is possible without homage being paid to the ultimate opera diva. 16. The moment you realise you're tripping the audio Moving through the exhibition, you wear a pair of pretty chic and futuristic headphones. Audio experiences at museums and galleries are pretty common these days, but a few minutes into DIVA, you realise the audio you hear along the way is being triggered by your movement through the space. There's nothing like hearing 'Pynk' by Janelle Monáe while staring deep into the folds of her vulva (pants). 15. The moment you realise you could be tripping Björk gown. The end. 14. The wall quotes So many, all good. Collect the set. Get them tattooed. 13. The early showgirl cossies The mannequins have hips! 12. Grace Jones's breastplate First created by Issey Miyake for his 1980 Autumn-Winter collection, it looks like liquid hard-moulded to the body. Various iterations of the Miyake breastplate have been worn by Grace Jones during her career, including in this recording of her performing 'I Need A Man'. 11. Nina makes me cry The selected photos and audio combine to capture a significant portion of Nina Simone's power, anger and legacy. 10. Marilyn Monroe's fringed black dress Worn when she played Sugar Kane in Some Like It Hot (1959), this was Marilyn at the peak of her powers. Funny, vulnerable and pre the disastrous and tragic rekindling of relations with the Kennedys. 9. The Pierce, Davis, Garland triptych Next to a Mildred Pierce costume is a poster for All About Eve, another all-time great film starring another diva, Bette Davis. If we're talking about 'Bette Davis Eyes', I recommend staring into the real ones (as Margot Channing) instead of JoJo Siwa's. Drag queen Charles Busch once described fictional divas Norma Desmond and Margo Channing as 'powerful women fighting for their rights in a straight man's world' and the exhibition's rich recounting of the way Hollywood regarded and treated 'difficult women' is useful set up for the reclamation of the term explored in the exhibition's later stages. 8. All the Bob Mackie There are at least four Bob Mackie for Cher designs in the exhibition, one he did for Liza Minnelli for New York New York and the flame dress he made for Tina Turner. Mackie remains unrivalled in his ability to blend costume with couture. He was also a master of costume sketches, and DIVA includes many of the sketches for the creations you can then see in their full glory. 7. Realising you need to step up the game for your 50th birthday Elton John wore the Sandy Powell design featured in the exhibition to his 50th birthday party. It was so ostentatious and large that he had to be trucked in. If nothing else, it was a good reminder that birthdays should be all about you, and you should step up and into a proper frock. 6. Our very own diva For the Auckland leg of this touring exhibition, Aotearoa's own diva, Dame Kiri Te Kanawa, has lent her millennium coat, worn at the New Year's Day performance she participated in as part of a 30-hour live television special broadcast to one billion people worldwide. Contains feathers and cultural touchstones. 5. Whitney makes me cry She was so beautiful and talented. The exhibition includes radiant photos of Houston and the dress she wore to the 1994 Grammy Awards, designed by Marc Bouwer. 4. The dress Joan Crawford wore in Mildred Pierce The 1945 film noir Mildred Pierce is one of my all-time favourite movies. It was one of the first old Hollywood films I watched that made me realise contemporary culture didn't have a monopoly on portraying complicated, complex, and sometimes difficult women. The dress itself, designed by Milo Anderson, was worn by Crawford in the film as she begins running her restaurant. It transitioned her away from plain, housewife garb into more structured and shoulder-padded suiting, marking her changing station and wealth. 3. The size of Prince's feet If you know, you know, but the exhibition contains a pair of Prince's shoes. They confirm Prince's likely origin as a pixie sent from on high to deliver music for the ages while emanating an ambiguous, raw and real sexual power. 2. The vulva pants I would sell an organ (if required) to see Janelle Monáe live. A high-concept fashion icon, the vulva pants worn for the 2018 'Pynk' video were peak vulva-inspired dressing, and frankly, we don't have enough of that. 1. Rihanna as pope Rihanna owns the Met Gala carpet and has done for a decade now. For the 2018 Met Gala, themed 'Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination', Rihanna wore a papal-inspired outfit designed by John Galliano for Maison Margiela. In my humble opinion, it ranks as one of the best Met Gala themes and one of Rihanna's best looks. We don't often get to see John Galliano's designs beyond our magazines and screens here, so seeing this beaded creation in person was truly the highlight for me. Rihanna's star began rising in 2005, and she remains an enigmatic diva with enduring popularity. My one true pope. My one true diva.

NZ Herald
11-06-2025
- NZ Herald
Rhythm and Vines adds SuperGrans Tairāwhiti Trust as charity partner
SuperGrans Tairāwhiti Trust will become the official charity partner of the annual Rhythm and Vines festival from this year. It follows Rhythm and Vines (R&V) fundraising more than $40,000 for the Gisborne Mayoral Flood Relief over the past two years. 'Rhythm and Vines is proud to announce a new


Scoop
11-06-2025
- Scoop
Rhythm And Vines Announce Supergrans Tairāwhiti Trust As Official Charity Partner For 2025 And Beyond
Press Release – 818. SuperGrans Tairwhiti Trust ( plays a vital role in the community by enabling whnau with skills and knowledge to take greater control of their own lives. Following the successful fundraising of over $40,000 for the Gisborne Mayoral Flood Relief across the past two years, Rhythm and Vines is proud to announce a new and enduring community partnership. Beginning in 2025, SuperGrans Tairāwhiti Trust will serve as the official charity partner of Rhythm and Vines, marking a significant step in the festival's ongoing commitment to uplifting and supporting the Tairāwhiti region. SuperGrans Tairāwhiti Trust ( plays a vital role in the community by enabling whānau with skills and knowledge to take greater control of their own lives. They do this by empowering whānau with practical life skills, mentoring and support, food security initiatives, and advocacy. The Trust works across generations to deliver essential services 1:1 or in workshops including cooking, food literacy, financial mentoring, gardening, creating healthy homes, sustainability and upcycling, employment preparation, parenting and more – all with the aim of improving food security, wellbeing and resilience throughout the region. 'We are impressed with the incredible work that SuperGrans does throughout the wider Tairāwhiti community,' says Kyle Bell, Head of Marketing at Rhythm and Vines. 'Partnering with them feels like a natural next step in our mission to give back to the region that has given so much to our festival. Their focus on long-term, practical solutions to food and skills insecurity is something we are honoured to support.' Fundraising initiatives include the COMP BY DONATION initiative, which transformed over 700 complimentary tickets into charitable donations. Additionally, the CLUB GISBORNE initiative will contribute $5 to the charity for every ticket sold via the platform, with up to 2,000 discounted tickets available for Gisborne locals. Locals can apply for discounted Club Gisborne tickets at 'We are deeply grateful to be partnering with Rhythm and Vines,' says Sarah Elliott, General Manager of SuperGrans Tairāwhiti Trust. 'This support will help us expand our reach and continue making a meaningful difference in the lives of whānau across the region. We see this as more than just a partnership – it's a chance to uplift our community together.' 'This partnership with Rhythm and Vines is a powerful alignment of community and creativity. At SuperGrans, we believe in the potential of every whānau to thrive with the right support and the creativity coming out of the region in film, music, kapa haka, and technology is second-to-none.' adds Sam Witters, Director Kōawa Studios and Board Member, SuperGrans Tairāwhiti Trust. This partnership builds on Rhythm and Vines' strong legacy of local support. On top of the charity partnership, the festival continues to donate tickets to local schools and charity fundraisers, including Hospice Tairāwhiti and Eastland Trust Rescue Helicopter, raising over $15,000 annually in additional fundraising efforts.