Rite of Return : Dunedin Fringe Festival

Rite of Return

Presented by: Rite of Return

From: Waihōpai | Invercargill

Storytelling Performance Art Visual Art Poetry Relaxed Performance

Where story, song, and live art collide to reveal the beauty, tension, and truth of who we are.

See tickets below

Presented by: Rite of Return

From: Waihōpai | Invercargill

Rite of Return is an immersive, cross-cultural performance weaving poetry, song, story, movement, and live frottage art into a visceral ritual of belonging. Part ceremony, part live art installation, part spoken-word experience, this work invites audiences into the raw, beautiful intersections where identity, culture, grief, and homecoming meet.


At its heart, Rite of Return explores what it means to live between worlds – Māori, Pasifika, Scottish, Swedish, Aotearoa, queer, spiritual, displaced, reclaimed. It is a work of paradox and beauty, silence and expression, memory and emergence. Through mark-making, layered sound, ancestral echoes, and interwoven narrative, the performance becomes a shifting ecosystem where stories rise in real time and the invisible becomes visible.


Created and performed by a cross-disciplinary trio.


Julian Noel
A storyteller, poet, and actor whose work is grounded in emotional truth and cultural resonance. Julian draws from Ngāpuhi lineage, lived wisdom, and the raw edges of human experience to create performances that land in the body as much as the ear. His voice – spoken, sung, or whispered – carries the pull of someone who has walked through fire and returned with something worth saying. He brings humour, depth, and fearless authenticity.


Anne-Marie Hamilton
A visual artist and poet who transforms texture, landforms, and memory into living impressions. Her frottage practice captures the hidden stories beneath surfaces – the grain of old timber, the imprint of history, the murmurs of place. With Scottish and New Zealand heritage, she bridges what is seen and unseen. Her live mark-making becomes a moving archive that traces belonging, time, and identity.


Ingrid Campbell
A poet, creative arts therapist, and orator of Cook Islands, Swedish, and Scottish ancestry. Ingrid weaves narrative, ritual, and emotional inquiry int

Thu
19
March
06:00PM
Fri
20
March
06:00PM

Duration

2hrs

Price

$10.00

13 years +
Content Warning

Audience Participation, Contains distressing or potentially triggering themes, Strong Language/Swearing

Checking for Tickets

*Fees may apply

Venue

Blue Oyster Art Project Space

16 Dowling Street Central Dunedin

| Wheelchair Access YES

Additional Accessibility Information
The gallery is wheelchair accessible (we have a ramp that can be placed over the steps) but the toilet is not. For comprehensive accessibility information and venue contact details, click here: Find out more

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About Us

Dunedin Fringe envisions a city ignited by creativity, where all people embrace art, culture and creativity into their daily lives.

We have a mission to provide platforms for creative expression that help nurture communities. We have a special focus on supporting emerging artists, and the development of new and experimental work.

We produce the Dunedin Fringe Festival, Amped Music Project and New Zealand Young Writers Festival annually, curate the White Box Gallery, and manage the performing arts venue Te Whare o Rukutia.

Our Contacts

Dunedin Fringe Arts Trust
19 George Street,
Dunedin 9016,
Aotearoa New Zealand

03 477 3350