4 - 22 March
TimeOut Festival Garden, Aotea SquareA powerful new video work by leading multi-media artist Lisa Reihana which delves into Māori and Pacific cultural practices pertaining to death and mourning.
4 - 22 March
Paradiso Spiegeltent, Aotea SquareDirty, dangerous and daring LIMBO is a circus/cabaret of mind-numbing contortion, aerial acrobatics, fantastical illusions and flames straight from Dante’s inferno – all set to a live band.
4 - 22 March
TimeOut Festival Garden, Aotea SquareUsing synthetic lei, Niki Hastings-McFall 'polynises' the green space of Aotea Square into a vibrant, living artwork based on the Samoan fale.
4 - 22 March
Daldy Street NorthAn ever-changing outdoor installation formed by a grid of mirrored towers, Field reflects the world around it in visually stunning and provocative ways.
4 - 21 March
ST PAUL St Gallery, AUT UniversityA lively and illuminating exhibition featuring the work of six contemporary Japanese artists practising in the aftermath of the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami.
4 - 22 March
Te Uru Waitakere Contemporary GalleryRecent works from New Zealand's 2009 Venice Biennale artist Judy Millar twist and contort in the surrounds and provoke new experiences of space.
5 - 10 March
Q LoftAward-winning Māori-Chinese playwright Mei-Lin Te Puea Hansen brings us a cross-cultural love affair sprouted amongst rows of potatoes, whilst revealing a page from our history rarely told.
5 - 22 March
Te Uru Waitakere Contemporary GalleryBringing together artists from across the North Island, A Delicate Balance examines the relationship between people, landscape and the kauri forest ecology.
6 - 10 March
The Civic‘Die Hard’ meets ‘The Office’. BLAM! is the hilarious, action-packed story of a cheeky troupe of underpaid, overworked office workers whose imaginations run wild.
6 - 21 March
Two RoomsShowing in New Zealand for the first time, David Shrigley's work is known for its quick-witted commentary on everyday situations.
7 - 22 March
Mangere Arts Centre - Ngā Tohu o UenukuRevolutionary artist Emory Douglas shares his political and artistic legacy in a collaboration with Mangere-based arts organisation Nga Rangatahi Toa.
7 - 21 March
Gus Fisher GalleryThe first major survey of Lonnie Hutchinson's varied and rich practice, Black Bird includes sculpture and paper-cuts, video and virtual-reality experiences.