Public lectures
in New Zealand
Upcoming talks at universities and institutions across Aotearoa. Free and ticketed events.
No lectures found.
Tomorrow — Friday 10 April
Saturday 11 April
Monday 13 April
-
Research funding in Aotearoa New Zealand—Threats, trajectories, and the potential for transformation
Details For many generations, Aotearoa has invested comparatively little, certainly by OECD standards, in research and development (R and D). Moreover, since 2020–21,...
-
Ockham NZ Book Awards 2026 Longlist Celebration
Join us to celebrate the announcement of the 2026 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards longlist, with readings from longlisted authors across all four categories.
Tuesday 14 April
-
Distinguished Lecture: The Brain in Pain — New Frontiers in Chronic Pain Research
The annual Otago Distinguished Lecture in Medicine explores breakthrough research into the neuroscience of chronic pain and emerging treatments.
-
A Painter, a Dentist and a lot of Ingenuity
Join Shaun Higgins, Curator Pictorial here at Auckland Museum, to learn how in the midst of a World War II prisoner of war camp, an Australian prisoner of war was able to create stunning portraits of his fellow inmates.
Wednesday 15 April
-
Work-Integrated Learning Research: Transforming the Future of Practice (WACE International Research Symposium)
-
School of Education research seminar: Professor Hella von Unger
We invite you to join us for a seminar with visiting Professor Hella von Unger, from Munich. We will have tea/coffee together at...
-
Big Tech: Too Big To Fail?
Inaugural Professorial Lecture: Alexandra Andhov
Thursday 16 April
-
Kia Tika, Kia Pono—For A Just Society
In Aotearoa, we know very well what our most pressing problems are—poverty, inequity, ecological destruction, and climate change. But we are much less...
-
New Zealand's Space Future: From Rocket Lab to National Strategy
An exploration of New Zealand's rapidly growing space sector, the science enabled by domestic launch capability, and the policy frameworks governing our use of space.
-
Writers & Readers: New Zealand Literary Identities
A conversation with three New Zealand authors about writing from the margins, finding a readership, and what it means to tell New Zealand stories in a globalised publishing market.
Friday 17 April
Saturday 18 April
-
Create With Pride — for 13–18 year olds
-
Welfare (1975) film screening
Join us for a film screening of Welfare, with an introduction by artist Rangi White in a discussion of Aotearoa's welfare bureaucracies
-
Welfare (1975)
For Tell us if something changes, artist Rangi White draws on the aesthetics of a Work and Income Office to consider how material and spatial conditions structure a person’s encounters with the state. Join us for a film screening of Welfare (1975) , with an introduction by White in a discussion of Aotearoa's welfare bureaucracies. Welfare, directed by Frederick Wiseman, explores the complexity of the welfare system, highlighting issues like housing, unemployment, and medical problems. It shows both welfare workers and clients struggling to navigate the laws and regulations that impact their lives.
Sunday 19 April
-
Easter Egg Hunt
Pick up our Easter Egg trail to help you hunt down decorated eggs hiding in our galleries, and be in to win a delicious chocolate hamper.
-
Secrets of the Southern Ocean: Otago's Deep-Sea Research Programme
Marine scientists share discoveries from recent voyages to the Southern Ocean, including new species, ecosystem dynamics, and implications for fisheries management.
Monday 20 April
Tuesday 21 April
Thursday 23 April
Friday 24 April
-
Arguing about morphemes
The School of Linguistics and Applied Language Studies hosts weekly seminars featuring a selection of visiting researchers as well as those from the...
-
Equity in Health: Progress and Challenges for Māori Wellbeing
A wānanga-style public discussion on the persistent health inequities facing Māori communities and what genuine system change would require.
Saturday 25 April
-
History Recovered: New Discoveries in the Alexander Turnbull Collection
Archivists and historians reveal recently catalogued items from the Alexander Turnbull Library collection, including previously unseen photographs and correspondence.
-
2026 Climate Festival Fortnight
Register hereWellington School of Business and Government (WSBG) at Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington is proud to support Wellington City Council’s first...
Thursday 30 April
Friday 1 May
Saturday 2 May
Sunday 3 May
Tuesday 5 May
Thursday 7 May
Saturday 9 May
-
WOMEN & NON-BINARY ARTIST HUI: CYANOTYPE WORKSHOP —
In this cyanotype workshop you’ll discover how science and creativity can coincide. Experiment with exposure, shadow, and UV light to create your own unique print using natural materials gathered from your surroundings. Lulu will guide you through two hours of playful exploration, learning, and good chats, perfect for anyone keen to try something new and make art in a relaxed, supportive environment.
-
New Zealand Sign Language Awards Night
Thursday 14 May
Saturday 16 May
Saturday 23 May
Wednesday 3 June
Thursday 4 June
-
SIVA MO LOU SOIFUA MANUIA —
This workshop offers a nurturing journey into Siva Samoa, where movement supports wellbeing. Participants explore foundational Siva Samoa steps and their cultural meanings — gestures that honour connections to land, ocean, sky, ancestry, and community. Through soft hands, grounded feet, and mindful breath, they experience how movement mirrors the natural world. Rooted in traditional practice, the session invites people to slow down, reconnect, and honour the body. Open to all levels. Let them Siva for health, language, and collective wellbeing.
-
MAMALU – A LINEAGE EMBODIED —
This workshop centres the malu, the Samoan female tattoo, as a living archive of cultural knowledge and ancestral presence. Through discussion, drawing, writing, and embodied practice, participants will explore how Indigenous knowledge is encoded in the body, and how these markings intersect with gender, identity, and sovereignty. Grounded Rosanna's own malu and artistic practice, the workshop invites critical reflection on issues of cultural appropriation, authorship, and the responsibilities of working with Indigenous visual systems.
Saturday 6 June
Saturday 20 June
Saturday 11 July
Tuesday 21 July
Saturday 25 July
Saturday 12 September
Saturday 17 October
Saturday 14 November
Friday 27 November
Saturday 27 February
Sunday 28 February
Sunday 7 March
Monday 22 March
Monday 29 March
-
COLLAGE CLUB —
Join us in rummaging through a wide range of materials (everything from maps to magazines) and once you find something that catches your eye… look for more. Then, cut, rip and stick to make something new. Whether you have a plan or want to be inspired this community event will offer a chance for creativity with no previous experience necessary. Collage club is a sustainable art event: all our materials are rescued from the tip via local recycling centres. This event kindly supported by the Creative Communities scheme / Creative New Zealand.
-
AUNTY'S HOUSE PRESENTS SKETCH&SIP —
Get ready to unwind, connect and create with Aunty’s House and Masala Bazaar at Studio One Toi Tū for Sketch&Sip — a chilled afternoon of art, music, and culture. Together, we’ll create something beautiful while sipping homemade spicy chai, nibbling on both sweet and savoury South Asian snacks, and soaking in a live cultural soundscape by our resident DJ: basmami.