Au Courant  - Summer Collection 23/24







Directors of Photography: Iain Frengley & Alex Lovell-Smith
Editor & Colourist: Richard Shaw 
Location Scout: Alex McCrossin
Makup Artist: Rachelle Gourley
Model: Clementine George
NOM*d Creative Director: Margi Robertson
NOM*d Designer: Rosie Trist
A collaboration with the team at NOM*d. Working from concept to creation of an underwater theme for their summer collection video.

The embedded video above is a short excerpt from the 3 channel & 3 min videos edited by Richard Shaw.

Orangutan Jungle School - Season 3, 2024



Colourist: Iain Frengley

6x 60 min HDR UHD episodes

Co-production betweeen Blue Ant, Love Nature and NHNZ Worldwide

Airing Autmn/Winter 2024...

I’m on my Bicycle, 2023



Director: Pennie Hunt
Director of Photography, Editor, Colourist: Iain Frengley
Camera Operator: Alex Lovell-Smith
Animation: David Butler
Production Assistant: Leila George
Art Department/Costume: Dallas Synott
Makeup: Christal Allpress
Bike gang: Indio Wilson, Hannah Wells, Chi Smithies
Nuns: Lena Roesch and Muriwai Schweikert-Doyle
Old folks: Finn Templeton, Liam Templeton and Felix Roesch
An ode to the bicycle gangs of our youth via rear projection.

Jack Osborne - Buried Bloodlines 2023




Colourist: Iain Frengley

2 x 60 min HD episodes

As of March 2024 available to stream on Amazon UK, Apple TV+, Prime Video, discovery +, Maxx...

Ārai awa, 2023





Artists: Rachael Rakena & Paulette Tamati-Elliffe
Music: Laughton Kora
Post Production: Michael Bridgman
Costume Designer: Amber Bridgman
Cinematography: Iain Frengley

First Exhibited at Te Atamira: June 25, 2023 - Sep 22, 2023

Ārai Awa is an immersive video installation reflecting on the obstructed ancestral journey of tuna (eels) in the Whakatipu region. Led by Rachael Rakena and Paulette Tamati-Elliffe with a creative team including Laughton Kora, Michael Bridgman, Komene Cassidy, Tūmai Cassidy, Ross Hemera, Amber Bridgman, Iain Frengley, Arihia Latham, Donna Matahaere-Atariki and Virginia Watson.

This apakura (lament) is sung by a solo female voice taking the position of a tuna (eel) who is unable to follow the ancestral trails her tīpuna have followed for millennia. Following the structure of a mōteatea (traditional chant), she expresses her grief for the end of her line as she cannot find passage to the ocean to release her hua. With this artwork we raise awareness of her plight, and call for action to enable her passage before it is too late.

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