Set Design, Theatre Talia Pua Set Design, Theatre Talia Pua

Mother Play

A play in five evictions

by Paula Vogel

 
 
 

Role

Set Design

Year

2025

Presented by: 

Silo Theatre Company 

Venue

Q Rangatira

Creative Team

Director - Sophie Roberts

Set Design - Dan Williams

Sound & Lighting - Sean Lynch

Costume - Tautahi Subritzky

Cast - Jennifer Ludlam, Amanda Tito, Tim Earl

Production Stills - Andi Crown

 
 
 
 
Subtle touches point out how this family is constantly on the move – their furniture is never fully unpacked, retaining its plastic protective coverings, so that you are always reminded that their domestic safety is always at threat. Life is transient and everything transparent.
— Glenda Pearce, Broadway World
 
 
 
 
The set also provides subtle magic – a mountain of rubbish appears when the door is opened, seconds later it’s just an empty room; there’s a recurring gag with a bottomless handbag.
— Renee Liang, Theatreview
 
 
 
 
 
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Theatre, Set Design Talia Pua Theatre, Set Design Talia Pua

Body Story

by Xin Ji

 
 
 

Role

Set Design

Year

2025

Co-Presented By: 

All Day Breakfast

Auckland Pride Festival

Venue

Q Loft

Creative Team

Performance Xin Ji

Dramaturg Nathan Joe

Music Director Alistair Deverick

Costume Design Steven Junil Park (6x4)

Lighting Design Rowan Pierce

AV Design Qianye and Qianhe Lin 

Producer Rosabel Tan

Assistant Producer Pennie Chang 

Production Manager Emmanuel Reynaud

Production Stills Jinki Cambronero

 
 
 
 

What does your body remember?

In this debut solo work by dance artist Xin Ji, the story of his body unravels through moments where the emotional and physical collide. Uncertainty, recklessness and euphoria slide into an intimate personal narrative — offering ways to consider our bodies as vehicles for resistance and alchemy.

 
 
 
Visionary set design by Talia Pua, elevates the performance to a multisensory experience
— Blackguard Media Reviews
a curated sparseness in visuals outside of bodies on the floor... all working to interact with one another to ultimately centre Xin as the Body.
— Nuanzhi Zheng 郑暖之, Bad Apple Gay
 
 
 

Team Body Story (we all wish we were as flexible as Xin!)

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Set Design, Theatre Talia Pua Set Design, Theatre Talia Pua

A Slow Burlesque

Created and Performed by Freya Silas Finch

 

A Slow Burlesque tells a story of transformation told through absurd comedy, physical theatre, burlesque and many, many, many costume changes.

 
 
 

Role

Set Design

Year

2024

Presented by

Silo Theatre

Venue

Basement, Mainspace

Creative Team

Performance - Freya Silas Finch

Director - Jo Randerson

Dramaturgy - Sophie Roberts

Costume Design - Kirsty Cameron, Tautahi Subritzky

Lighting Design - Bekky Boyce

Sound Design - Cello Forrester

Choreography - Josie Archer

Photographs courtesy of Andi Crown

 
 
 
 

A Slow Burlesque was such a special show to collaborate on. It was the first ever production I’d worked on where the design was costume led. It was really exciting to rethink costume as set. I loved collaborating closely with Freya, Jo, Kirsty and Tau to discover new ways for costume to become set. We explored lots of ways in which costumes could live on stage. I mean this is both a practical level, but also conceptually. If we think of each piece of costume as a character, how do they inhabit the space before and after the performer puts them on and “animates” them. Like putting a shoe at the foot of a stool, or draping a shirt on the floor in such a way that it looks like its wearer has magically disappeared.

Another key aspect of the design was to bring to life the world of a fading burlesque theatre. Being at the Basement Theatre, meant that a lot of my work was done for me, as the space already has such rich character and history. All I had to do was wrangle the seating configuration to expose all of its backstage glory, and hunt down some old Axminster carpet (which is quite tricky nowadays!) and dye it red.

 
 
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Theatre, Set Design Talia Pua Theatre, Set Design Talia Pua

How to Throw a Chinese Funeral 婆婆再见

A play by Jill Kwan

 
 
 

When Lily and Anna’s grandmother passes away, they must reunite with their family in Malaysia to orchestrate her Taoist funeral - a custom lost even to their headstrong mum and outrageous Auntie.

 
 
 

Role

Set Design

Year

2023

Co-Produced By: 

Hand Pulled Collective

Proudly Asian Theatre

Venue

Basement Mainspace

Creative Team

Co-Producers - Natalya Mandich-Dohnt, John Rata

Playwright & Director - Jill Kwan

Lighting & Scenet Design, Operator -  Rae Longshaw-Park

Props Design - Cinta Damerell

Props Assistant - JingCheng Zhao

Set Design Mentor - John Veryt

Set Assistant - Tema Pua

Shadow Puppetry & Projections Design - Darryl Chin

Shadow Puppet Assistant - Yin-Chi Lee

Music Composition & Sound Design - Fiona Chua

Directing Mentor - Ahi Karunaharn

Dramaturge - Renee Liang

Cantonese Translation & Coach - Audrey Chan

Marketing Mananger - Jennifer Cheuk

Photography - John Rata

Stage Manager - Lisa Joe

Cast - Lisa Zhang, Ann An, Janet Tan, Yoong Ru Heng, Mustaq Missouri and Charles Chan

 
 
 
 

What drew me to this project was the fact that it was based in Malaysia. As a New Zealand born Malaysian-Chinese, I cannot recall any other time I have heard my parents’ accents and our culture depicted on a New Zealand stage. Jill’s directorial vision was ambitious, involving puppetry and projection, which made for fun design challenges.

婆婆 Po Po’s altar is the obtrusive “mountain” at the centre of the story, which all the characters and plot revolves around. Drawing upon Taoist and Buddhist beliefs, that the spirit remains on earth for a few days before going to heaven, I wanted to extend the altar to the entire house. I drew inspiration from the materiality of Chinese paper offerings and joss paper. 

 
 
 

 In Chinese ancestor worship, burning paper offerings is a physical expression of kinship and filial piety to ensure the wellbeing of the deceased in the afterlife. 

 
 
 

Suspended white screens displaying the architecture of the house form the joss paper backdrop to the golden centre of the altar. This transforms the house into a transient space, the meeting place between the living and the dead, past and present. As character Yi explains, “ [婆婆 Po Po] is still with us!”.

 
 
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Set Design, Theatre Talia Pua Set Design, Theatre Talia Pua

Rituals of Similarity

A contemporary dance duet by Brittany and Natasha Kohler for Dance Plant Collective, unravelling the intricate layers of twinhood.

 
 
 

Role

Set Design

Year

2023

Co-Presented By: 

Dance Plant Collective and Q Theatre 

Venue

Q Loft

Creative Team

Choreographers and Performers - Brittany Kohler and Natasha Kohler

Producer - Julie Zhu

Costume Designer - Zoë McNicholas

Lighting Designer & Op - Paul Bennett

Sound Designer - Lucien Johnson

 
 
 
 

This was a very special collaboration. Being a twin myself, there was an instant understanding which made for a seamless design process.

At the start of the project,  Brit and Tash presented me with a beautiful mood board of inflated spaces and soft moldable forms, all in a striking colour scheme of pinks and oranges. We wanted to transport the audience into the world of the womb. 

The drape of the sheer curtains echoes the shape of ultrasound scans and cocoons the dancers in a womb-like arena that feels altogether otherworldly yet familiar, enveloping yet expansive, homely yet sacred.

Photographs by Amanda Billing

 
 
 
 
Though minimal, where designer Talia Pua excels is in textures. Tapere Nui’s black box has become a white cocoon, a blank canvas for the liminal spaces the performers move through. The sheer white drapes work beautifully to catch the performer’s shadows, while also bringing to mind a vaguely recalled term from high school biology - the amniotic sac.
— El Yule, Art Murmers
Read Full Review Here
 
 
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