The blessing of Waka Putanga at Āhua Gallery at Te Puia | New Zealand Māori Arts and Crafts Institute. L – R: Jessie
Emery, Tim Cossar, Hohepa Peni, Lisa Hopkins, Ngahihi Bidois, Carolyn Bidois, Sean Marsh.
A Tauihu carving was blessed and gifted to Business Events Industry Aotearoa yesterday at Te Puia | New Zealand Māori
Arts and Crafts Institute.
This week Rotorua is hosting MEETINGS organised by Business Events Industry Aotearoa (BEIA) - the biggest national trade
show in Aotearoa New Zealand for the business events industry, where international buyers come together to discuss new
business opportunities.
BEIA chief executive Lisa Hopkins said it was an incredibly humbling moment to see the taonga unveiled.
“We feel extremely privileged, and we also accept the responsibility and understand the importance of what has just
happened. It’s a beautiful piece - it’s a new member of the team and I feel quite overwhelmed by the manaaki we’ve been
shown,” she said.
Hopkins explained that the genesis of this moment came together over a cup of coffee last year when BEIA was talking
about bringing MEETINGS to Rotorua and what that might look like.
“We thought, wouldn’t it be great to have a taonga from the New Zealand Māori Arts and Crafts Institute Te Wānanga
Whakairo Rākau (National School of Wood Carving) that could be put on display at our annual events, and which could be
part of the BEIA organisation.”
New Zealand Māori Arts and Crafts Institute (NZMACI) Pouako Whakairo Rākau (wood carving tutor) Hohepa Peni led the
carving of the piece titled Waka Putanga, also working on it with tauira (students). He explained that a Tauihu is the
front-end prow of a waka in miniature form which represents people coming from overseas for MEETINGS for an emergence of
ideas.
The rākau is from a 3,000-year-old log of kauri from Tā (Sir) Hekenukumai Busby, a Te Tai Tokerau elder who led the
revival of traditional Māori navigation and ocean voyaging skills. This same log of kauri was also used to carve a
10-metre waka maumahara at the World Expo in Shanghai in 2019 as part of the NZMACI Tuku Iho Living Legacy Exhibition.
Peni says the tauihu has a tenison morton join cut at the bottom which is referred to as the haumi kokomo - a specific
join to extend the waka and make it longer.
“In a different context – haumi means ‘to join’ as a kaupapa (purpose) – it reflects how we seek to join ideas at this
MEETINGS event, with the connecting of business,” said Peni.
“The two stylised figures represent tangata ora (the living) – the people who will be at MEETINGS and the people of
BEIA.
“This form is also in putanga style, which means ‘to emerge’, to step out. We’ve also tried to keep this culturally
accessible to all and we have contemporised the piece with hollowing out techniques which are more sculptural, to show
off the rākau – it’s not over designed because it’s beautiful kauri,” he said.
“The pāua (abalone) shell inlays are an acknowledgement of travellers converging like rivers or seas.
“The kura (feathers) represent the dreams everyone brings for the future. At MEETINGS, attendees are looking for
connections and outcomes to make their dreams become a reality. The feathers in an indigenous context connect us back
with our tūpuna (ancestors),” Peni explained.
Waka Putanga is now a feature at the entrance of the Energy Events Centre where MEETINGS is held over the next two days.
Whano, whano!
Haramai te Toki!
Haumi ē!, hui ē!
Taiki ē!