Warwick Henderson Gallery
GalleryNew Zealand
About Artist:
As a prominent Maori artist, Robyn Kahukiwa has established a strong connection between art and politics, augmenting the current Maori cultural renaissance. Australian born, Kahukiwa lost her connection with her culture and family until re-establishing her ties on her return to New Zealand. The rediscovery of her Maori heritage was fundamental to her beginning as an artist. Events of the mid-1970s including the Hikoi (Land March on Parliament) and the passing of the Treaty of Waitangi Act encouraged her interest in issues relevant to the Maori. In each case, the work she has completed since her early career as an artist ‘has marked a stage in the process of reclaiming and affirming identity’(1).
Kahukiwa has a considerable interest in connecting with the Maori community and specifically with the rangitahi (young Maori people) through her work. In 1972 she was employed as an art teacher at Mana College, Porirua. During this time she focused on sharing her cultural experiences with younger people. ‘Painting from her experience, and as a largely self-taught artist, initially meant empathizing with her Maori and Pacific Island students’ sense of alienation,urbanization, detribalization and cultural dislocation and disorientation, and delineating images of the ‘outsider’ in a painfully sincere form of realism’(2).
1. Jonathan Mane-Wheoki, “Robyn Kahukiwa: My Ancestors are with me Always”, Art New Zealand, 75, Winter 1995. 61.
2. Ibid
Robyn Kahukiwa
Pou Hine me Taiaha
- 2016
- 60 x 120 cm
- Fine Art Category: paintings
- Medium: Oil / Canvas
- Origin: New Zealand
- Certificate of Authenticity: yes
- Provenance: Exhibited with Warwick Henderson Gallery in 2016
- Signed: Not signed
- Comments:
Exhibited at Warwick Henderson Gallery "Tangata Whenua" 2016
- Visit Website
- Price: 8,500.00 NZD
- Seller: Warwick Henderson Gallery, New Zealand
Contact Seller...
- More by this artist
- More from this seller
- Get artist alerts
- Save to favourites
- Share on facebook
- Share on twitter
- Pin to Pinterest
- Share on LinkedIn
- Email this artwork
- Report this artwork
- Artplode ID: 3286
- Artplode Seller ID: 5457
About Artist:
As a prominent Maori artist, Robyn Kahukiwa has established a strong connection between art and politics, augmenting the current Maori cultural renaissance. Australian born, Kahukiwa lost her connection with her culture and family until re-establishing her ties on her return to New Zealand. The rediscovery of her Maori heritage was fundamental to her beginning as an artist. Events of the mid-1970s including the Hikoi (Land March on Parliament) and the passing of the Treaty of Waitangi Act encouraged her interest in issues relevant to the Maori. In each case, the work she has completed since her early career as an artist ‘has marked a stage in the process of reclaiming and affirming identity’(1).
Kahukiwa has a considerable interest in connecting with the Maori community and specifically with the rangitahi (young Maori people) through her work. In 1972 she was employed as an art teacher at Mana College, Porirua. During this time she focused on sharing her cultural experiences with younger people. ‘Painting from her experience, and as a largely self-taught artist, initially meant empathizing with her Maori and Pacific Island students’ sense of alienation,urbanization, detribalization and cultural dislocation and disorientation, and delineating images of the ‘outsider’ in a painfully sincere form of realism’(2).
1. Jonathan Mane-Wheoki, “Robyn Kahukiwa: My Ancestors are with me Always”, Art New Zealand, 75, Winter 1995. 61.
2. Ibid