Otara shopping centre last Saturday was full of high school kids using traditional Pacific lashing methods to tie plastic bottles into huge pavilions. And in the small-but-significant, council-run Fresh Gallery - celebrating 66 exhibitions in six years - Allan Tonkin of New Flava Barbers shaved patterns on the heads of kids who'd lined up for hours.
"What he does is commercial, but it's also art; it's exquisite," insists smart, livewire Ema Tavola, Fresh Gallery curator and Auckland Council Pacific arts co-ordinator.
Architecture and hairdressing: in the "mainstream" these might be considered design rather than art, but in South Auckland both these events were part of last month's Pacific Arts Summit.
The Pacific gaze, seeing art as all-inclusive and fluid, is not new. Traditionally, there was no division between "art" and "craft", as curator and artist Leafa Janice Wilson, of Samoan heritage, pointed out at a Summit "Hump Day" art talk.
Thus, counter to Oscar Wilde's "all art is useless", just because something is useful, doesn't make it non-art in a Pacific context. We're not just talking traditional kete, bowls and siapo here, but also (in Wilson's practice) things like funeral programmes and posters for a post-natal depression support group.