Parihaka: The Art Of Passive Resistance
PARIHAKA
THE ART OF PASSIVE RESISTANCE
City Gallery
Wellington
26 August - 19 January
2001
www.parihaka.city-gallery.org.nz
August /
September Public Programme events
(Admission
free)
Saturday 26 August, 2pm, City Cinema, City Gallery
Parihaka - Introductory talk
This lecture will open
with a körero by Mahara Okeroa - MP for Te
Tai
Tonga/Parihaka Pä Trustee, and Parihaka spokesperson
Te Miringa Hohaia.
Lecturer Mereana Hond will speak on
behalf of the women of Parihaka and will introduce Dr Hazel
Riseborough, author of Days of Darkness: Taranaki 1878-1884
and Parihaka and the Historians.
Parihaka in Focus
The Parihaka story goes back over 130 years. For Mäori, especially Taranaki Mäori, it has always been in sharp focus, but for many people the picture has been blurred. A clearer understanding of the story will provide a useful background from which to view the art and poetry of the exhibition.
Dr Hazel Riseborough
Sunday 27 August,
1pm
Words to the Mountain
Leading New Zealand poets
read newly commissioned works and others relating to
Parihaka, land and identity - JC Sturm, Elizabeth Smither,
Roma Potiki, Rore Hapipi, Robert Sullivan, Ian Wedde, Chris
Orsman, Alistair Te Ariki Campbell, Dinah Hawken, Apirana
Taylor.
* gold coin donation
Sunday 3 September,
3pm
Ask That Mountain
Author of the ground-breaking
book Ask That Mountain (1975), Dick Scott became aware of
Parihaka in the early 1950s. His first book, The Parihaka
Story, appeared in 1954. Dick Scott will talk with Te
Miringa Hohaia and Gregory O'Brien about how he became
involved with the people of the pä and their history. The
evolution of both publications, their impact and the ongoing
significance of the Parihaka story will be discussed.
Sunday 10 September, 3pm
Parihaka - Director's
Tour
Gallery Director Paula Savage takes you on a
personal tour of the exhibition. She shares something of the
exhibition history and the unique journey that turned a
vision into a reality. This art confronts the issues of
Mäori/Päkehä relations. By confronting and acknowledging the
damage done, art has the power to heal the wounds and begin
the journey toward reconciliation. - Paula Savage
Sunday
17 September, 1pm
Taranaki Cries and Whispers
Join
Greg O'Brien for a floortalk exploring the voices in Ralph
Hotere's 'Te Whiti' series. Texts from ancient times until
the present, in Mäori and English, are the basis for these
dark, atmospheric works. In this series of 'painted
utterances', words are set adrift in the natural world or
inscribed on the night sky. The talk will also examine the
pivotal works in relation to Hotere's oeuvre.
Sunday 17
September, 3pm
A Spiritual Relationship
Tohu and Te
Whiti were both immersed in their own culture's wairua and
fully conversant with Christian scriptures. Professor of
Religious Studies at Victoria, Paul Morris considers the
religious response of Tohu and Te Whiti, comparing this with
first nations' spirituality in other cultures.
Sunday 24
September, 3pm
Ko Taranaki Maunga anake kei te Möhio -
Taranaki Saw It All
As curator of the 1973 exhibition
Taranaki Saw It All, James Mack stepped into a
cross-cultural role that few had undertaken in the gallery
environment of the time. In a retrospective excursion, he
discusses his involvement and pays tribute to the people of
Taranaki and the artists who made the exhibition possible.
I
n 1972, as newly appointed Exhibitions Officer at
the recently amalgamated Waikato Museum & Art Gallery, I was
told to do an exhibition on Te Whiti o Rongomai and
Parihaka. I had no idea who he was, neither did I then
realise the research I was about to embark on would change
my life.
Michael Hirschfeld Gallery (Admission free)
Practising Beauty
28 July - 27 August 2000
Presenting work by four Wellington artists - Catherine
Bagnall, Kathy Barry, Emma Febvre-Richards and Maddie Leach
- which explores the practices of creating and viewing
beauty.
Anahera Te Pono
1 September - 1 October
2000
Works in stone by Hariata Ropata Tangahoe.
All
media inquiries to:
Anne Irving
PUBLICIST
T: 04
801 3959 / F: 04 801 3096
E:
anne.irving@wcc.govt.nz