250 years on Maritime Museum unfurls new perspectives
9/09/2019
Seven contemporary artists explore early
Māori and European encounters through new work inspired by
museum taonga
An upcoming exhibition at the New Zealand Maritime Museum Hui Te Ananui A Tangaroa, recognises the exceptional feats of Māori, Pacific, and European navigators and voyagers, and much more besides.
Tākiri: An Unfurling (12 October
2019-7 June 2020) considers the ongoing impact of the early
encounters between Māori and Europeans through new works
inspired by taonga and artefacts.
The artists involved
are: Reweti Arapere (Ngāti Raukawa, Ngāti Porou, Ngāti
Tūwharetoa); Chris Charteris (iKiribati, Fijian, English);
Kohai Grace (Ngati Toa Rangatira, Ngati Porou, Te Ati
Awa, Ngati Raukawa); Nikau Gabrielle Hindin (Te Rarawa,
Ngāpuhi); Jasmine Togo-Brisby (Australian South Sea
Islander); Rongomaiaia Te Whaiti (Ngati Kahungunu ki
Wairarapa, Ngāi Hinewaka, Ngāi Tahu, Ngati Kuri, Ngāi
Tūāhuriri, Ngāti Waewae); and the 7558
Collective.
Each artist investigates aspects of
navigation, migration and voyaging, loosely related to
contact with those aboard the 1769 voyage of HMS
ENDEAVOUR—including the Polynesian navigator Tupaia, and
Captain James Cook.
In a large-scale illustration
Arapere honours the master navigator Kupe, among others. In
a series of portraits Togo-Brisby draws on Cook’s exchange
of ship’s medals to highlight the traumatic impact of
trade. And Grace has created a kahu toroa (albatross cape),
referencing those sacred birds keenly looked to and for by
ocean navigators.
Museum artefacts are also given some
air, and reframing. Models of waka accompany Arapere’s
work. A RESOLUTION medal from Cook’s second voyage in 1771
pairs with Togo-Brisby’s photographs. A ship’s model
made of albatross breast bone thought to be associated with
one of Ernest Shackletons’s expeditions, as well as an
albatross egg collected in the early 20th century, sit
alongside Grace’s kahu.
The exhibition’s curators
are Bridget Reweti and Linda Tyler. The contemporary works
will remain in the Museum’s collection, lending complexity
and perspective to the stories that define
Aotearoa.
An extensive public programme wraps around
the exhibition, and includes workshops on weaving and
celestial navigation; sessions on native plants and the
politics of mapping; a conference on seabirds; and the
welcoming of the Tuia – 250 flotilla of Māori,
Pacific and European vessels to the Museum’s marina over
Labour Weekend (26-28 October).
Takiri is part
of Tuia – Encounters 250, a Ministry for Culture
and Heritage-led national discussion and debate,
acknowledging 250 years since the first sustained onshore
meetings between Māori and Europeans.
- ENDS