Kahe Point Beach Park
Meleanna Aluli Meyer
Meleanna Aluli Meyer is a visual poet — alchemist of light and moving image, translator of ʻike Hawaiʻi — native wisdom through kaona, metaphor. Engaging audiences and viewers on canvas, in film, and the written word, Aluli Meyer interfaces with the world through a Hawaiian lens, which allows her to share authentically, from a Kanaka, Hawaiian, perspective. As a kamaʻāina, child of the land, Aluli Meyer has cultivated a deep appreciation and connection to the sands of Kailua, her one hānau, birthplace, in the ahupua‘a of Koʻolaupoko, Oʻahu, Hawaiʻi.
As a Salzburg, an EWC and APAWLI fellow, those deeply engaging cross-cultural experiences have gifted her with rare insights about the world. Aluli Meyer is a seeker, with a never-ending curiosity about complex, intractable issues that provide a rich palette from which to draw, paint, ideate, and realize her work. Hers is an exploration of articulating personal and collective connections to people and beliefs, through line, color, form, and essence. While pursuing a design-photography degree at Stanford University (ʻ78); Meyer spent a year overseas, living in both Italy and France, as a student of history, linguistics, and design. As an award winning artist and educator she sees her work as a springboard for deeper conversations, and further, for reconciliation and healing.
Aluli Meyer builds her work, layer by layer, often digitally, pressing ideas that translate into resonant and vibrant images and films that allow others access into a Hawaiian worldview that is authentic and deep.
Solomon Enos
Solomon Robert Nui Enos is a Native Hawaiian artist, illustrator, and visionary. Born and raised in Makaha Valley (O‘ahu, Hawai‘i), Solomon hails from the well-known Enos ‘ohana. Solomon has been making art for more than 30 years and he is adept at artistic expression in a wide variety of media including oil paintings, book illustrations, murals, and game design. A self-described “Possibilist”, Solomon’s art expresses an informed aspirational vision of the world at its best via contemporary and traditional art that leans towards Sci-Fi and Fantasy. His work touches on themes like collective-consciousness, ancestry and identity, our relationship with our planet, and all through the lens of his experience as a person indigenous to Hawai‘i.