Robin White and Ruha Fifita, We are the small axe's, 2015, Natural dyes and pigments on barkcloth. Collection of Christchurch Art Gallery Te Puna o Waiwhetū, purchased 2019
Photo Credit
Robin White and Ruha Fifita, We are the small axe's, 2015, Natural dyes and pigments on barkcloth. Collection of Christchurch Art Gallery Te Puna o Waiwhetū, purchased 2019
Photo Credit
Te Wheke means the octopus in te reo Māori. For many cultures around the Pacific Ocean, this resourceful, adventurous creature is a symbol of early voyages from the Polynesian homelands of Hawaiki. Full of stories of migration, connection and belonging, this huge new exhibition reflects the connections and tensions that shape our past, present and future.
Te Wheke includes tivaevae, raranga (weaving), whakairo (carving), painting, works on paper, video, sculpture, photography and installation art – all telling a new story of Aotearoa’s art history, looking from the Pacific outwards.
Developed in consultation with Stephanie Oberg.
Read a review of this show in the British magazine Apollo.
Te Wheke means the octopus in te reo Māori. For many cultures around the Pacific Ocean, this resourceful, adventurous creature is a symbol of early voyages from the Polynesian homelands of Hawaiki. Full of stories of migration, connection and belonging, this huge new exhibition reflects the connections and tensions that shape our past, present and future.
Te Wheke includes tivaevae, raranga (weaving), whakairo (carving), painting, works on paper, video, sculpture, photography and installation art – all telling a new story of Aotearoa’s art history, looking from the Pacific outwards.
Developed in consultation with Stephanie Oberg.
Read a review of this show in the British magazine Apollo.