| 11 June - 4 September 2005
Hei tiki are treasured taonga and adornment items. Commonly
called tiki, these objects are properly referred to as hei tiki:
hei meaning to wear around the neck. Through time hei tiki have
become an icon that is unique to Aotearoa New Zealand.
The exhibition Te Hei Tiki considers how over many
generations hei tiki have captured moments and movements in Māori
and New Zealand histories. Through hei tiki artists have related
stories that are about taonga, relationships between people,
place, art, collecting, peace, war, consumerism and cultural
politics.
Te Hei Tiki will retell stories from oral and documented
histories explaining how hei tiki were made and for whom. Hei tiki
are highly valued taonga, not only for their materiality, but also
for the connections they make across generations and the tribal
histories they continue to evoke.
From the time of early encounters with explorers hei tiki have
been of interest to Europeans; Captain Cook’s artists depicted
them and they quickly became sought after by explorers and
collectors. Subsequent generations working within the western art
tradition have represented hei tiki in a diverse range of media
and from distinct perspectives. It will also consider the role of
popular culture in our twenty-first century understanding of hei
tiki.
Fundamental to the exhibition are the linkages between taonga,
historic, modern and contemporary art. Te Hei Tiki will
bring together works ranging from taonga to contemporary
representations of hei tiki, Māori portraits by Gottfried
Lindauer to a painted mural by Arnold Wilson. Sometimes
contentious, frequently identity affirming the exhibition will
explore the enduring history of hei tiki.
Admission charge
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