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Auckland Art Gallery curator Māori art, Nigel Borell, in front of Michael Parakowhai’s ‘Te ao hurihuri’. (Photo: Leonie Hayden)
Auckland Art Gallery curator Māori art, Nigel Borell, in front of Michael Parakowhai’s ‘Te ao hurihuri’. (Photo: Leonie Hayden)

ĀteaDecember 8, 2020

Toi Tū Toi Ora: The exhibition celebrating the awesome power of Māori art

Auckland Art Gallery curator Māori art, Nigel Borell, in front of Michael Parakowhai’s ‘Te ao hurihuri’. (Photo: Leonie Hayden)
Auckland Art Gallery curator Māori art, Nigel Borell, in front of Michael Parakowhai’s ‘Te ao hurihuri’. (Photo: Leonie Hayden)

A morning spent exploring the new Toi Tū Toi Ora Māori contemporary art exhibition at Auckland Art Gallery with curator Nigel Borell stirred up many complex feelings, writes Ātea editor Leonie Hayden.

This story was published on December 8, 2020. Curator Nigel Borrell has since left Auckland Art Gallery.

Te ihi, te wehi, te wana are concepts in te ao Māori that provide a handy vocabulary, lacking in English, for describing great big feelings. Te ihi (essential force), te wehi (a response of awe in reaction to ihi), and te wana (exhilaration) are often used to describe the response to haka, that lifting of your emotions to an almost unbearable point, and the high you feel as a result.

It’s also the only way of describing my response during my first visit to the incredible new exhibition of Māori contemporary art, Toi Tū Toi Ora, at the Auckland Art Gallery.

Filling the curator Māori role vacated by Ngahiraka Mason in 2015, artist and curator Nigel Borell (Pirirākau, Ngāi Te Rangi, Ngāti Ranginui, Te Whakatōhea) first pitched this show in his interview for the job at the gallery. Five years in the making (and another 70-odd years before that), it’s the largest survey of contemporary Māori art in 20 years, involving 110 artists, and more than 300 works.

“The whole show is really ambitious, and I just thought ‘I hope this works’,” Borell told me on a walk around the first floor of the show, the week before the grand opening.

He said he chose the Māori creation narrative to guide the curation of his exhibition, which has taken over Auckland Art Gallery’s entire exhibition space.

“I wanted to ground it in Māori worldview, as opposed to the western fine art world telling us where we fit into the art scene. Even the diverse understandings of the creation narrative, it was the one thing that we as Māori all had in common, so it became the elemental way of introducing a conversation about contemporary Māori art.”

It starts with Te Kore: the void, the potentiality, the pure, unformed energy at the beginning of time. It has parallels, Borell explained as he led me into the first room, with theories by physicists that our ever-expanding universe was birthed from a black hole. Plunged into darkness, Peter Robinson’s ‘I exist I am not another I am’ met us at the door, questioning a nothing/being binary (or are they ones and zeros? Or the name of Io, the supreme being?). A film work of stars by Reuben Paterson sat opposite Robert Jahnke’s ‘Whenua Kore’, an infinite window of light, extending the space in disconcerting ways. They invited us further into the darkness to discover what lay at the end of the room – Ralph Hotere’s ‘Black paintings’, but as you’ve never seen them. In the darkened space it wasn’t the familiar black panels that defined them, although the energy of those depths was still thrilling, but the thin vertical and horizontal beams of colour piercing the night, like the very first glimpses of light on the horizon.

“Of course Ralph wasn’t big on talking about his work, but he loved the colour black,” Borell told me, while I, slightly overwhelmed by their beauty, struggled to compose myself. “It was the ceaseless truth in his practice. For him, it wasn’t a dense colour full of nothing, but a colour full of potential. So just like our narratives talk about darkness holding potential, he was mining those philosophical ideas in his own work.

“We try to pay homage to that nothingness, and the murmurings of being.”

Te Pō installation view (Photo: Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2020)

After Te Kore came Te Pō, the night. Another darkened room but the forms were a bit brighter, bolder. “The beginnings of life are starting to take shape. The artworks in this room use shadow and light, and use transformation as a way to talk about some of those ideas,” Borell explained. We admired a glistening bronze river by Israel Tangaroa Birch, reaching through the room from this world into the next.

Through the next archway, Lisa Reihana’s ‘Ihi’, a tall, impossibly high-definition video work, told the story of the separation of Ranginui and Papatūānuku by their son Tāne Mahuta, and the creation of Te Ao Mārama, the world of light and understanding. Opposite, as if observing, sat Robyn Kahukiwa’s ‘Hinetitama’. There are some artworks that feel as familiar as family. Meeting Kahukiwa’s painting face to face brought back my swirling emotions again. For a second time, I castigated myself for fighting back tears.

I was struck by how meaningful it felt that young and old artists were sharing the spaces with such ease, no hierarchy, just whanaungatanga. Borell connected it back to the desire to disrupt institutional norms. “If we’re going to deconstruct the western art canon, then it’s about seeing us as a collective across generations. We’re having conversations with each other across time.”

The final gallery we visited, at that time not yet open to the public, was dedicated to the transition back to night, from life to the afterlife. “In this room we acknowledge the passing of day into night, the world of the living to the afterlife. So just as we do in the meeting house, we pay tribute to Hine-nui-te-pō, who looks after us in the after life.”

At first it was Michael Parekowhai’s huge elephant bookend sculptures that demanded attention. They’re hard to miss. Borell described them as “philosophical bookends to this idea of being”.

But it was the piece standing high at the end of the gallery that stopped me in my tracks.

Commissioned by Borell especially for the exhibition, wāhine collective Mata Aho’s large-scale textile installation named ‘Atapō’ looks at the story of Hinetītama, the dawn maiden, and her transition to becoming Hine-nui-te-pō. Two stories of layered black cloth with shrouded waharua-shaped windows through the work offer a glimpse beyond the veil from both the ground floor and the mezzanine above. Behind it sits it a second work by their mentor Maureen Lander, a lighter waterfall of materials adorned with hand-dyed muka in the colours of the dawn. Motion-triggered sensors filter the sound of the tīwaiwaka into the space, the messenger who warned Hine-nui-te-pō of Māui’s plans to enter her vagina in the pursuit of eternal life.

Works commissioned for Toi Tū Toi Ora: ‘Takoto’ by Ana Iti and ‘Puhoro’ by Sandy Adset, the youngest and oldest artists in the show, respectively (Photo: Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki)

“Often in our narratives you hear about the male gods but not as much about the women, so in this room we wanted to pay tribute to women, by women. Such as the original ‘Digital Marae’ by Lisa Reihana, looking at our wāhine demi gods,” he said, pointing to Reihana’s spectacular digital print of ‘Mahuika’.

“It was important to have a good mix of male and female voices, and we actually have more women than men in the show, it’s about 60/40. Partly purposeful, partly just responding to what I feel is important and needs to be seen.”

For a third time I gulped down my emotions, coughing loudly to cover the quiver in my voice. Borell kindly assured me I wasn’t the first to become emotional. “For Māori who have a sense of this mātauranga, they’re going to come into this space and have a very different connection to this show. And someone who doesn’t, they’re going to learn it.”

It wasn’t until the following Friday that I got to see the rest of the exhibition. On the morning of the grand opening, at 4.30am, hundreds of people gathered for the dawn blessing. Led by Borell and Ngāti Whātua kaiārahi, the large group snaked through the galleries, up and down stairs, giving karakia to the work, its creators and those tasked with its care. Painting, weaving, carving, sculpture, video, jewellery and adornment, photography, ceramics – room after room of taonga unearthed by Borell and his team from the gallery’s collection, museums, public and private collections, and the living room walls and basements of artists and their whānau.

Lacking the vocabulary to describe art in terms that the art-literate would deem adequate, I can only tell you how these works made me feel. Proud. Sad, at times, thinking about the number of artists who weren’t given the same spotlight or accolades as their peers at the height of their careers. Surprised at how broad the expression of Māoritanga can be. Overwhelmed with gratitude to artists for teaching us about ourselves, and to Borell for fighting for the show.

And even then sharing these feelings can’t accurately describe te ihi, te wehi, te wana. So you’ll just have to go and see it for yourself. You’ll see what I mean.

Keep going!
The Modern Māori Quartet perform until December 20 at the Civic. (Photo: Auckland Live)
The Modern Māori Quartet perform until December 20 at the Civic. (Photo: Auckland Live)

ĀteaDecember 5, 2020

Review: The Modern Māori Quartet is a celebration of the magic of a crowd

The Modern Māori Quartet perform until December 20 at the Civic. (Photo: Auckland Live)
The Modern Māori Quartet perform until December 20 at the Civic. (Photo: Auckland Live)

Imagine a raucous garage party, with better talent, lighting and sound: welcome to the Modern Māori Quartet’s new show at Auckland’s Civic.

There are many lessons to learn from 2020, but if there’s one I hope sticks, it’s the lesson to not to take shit for granted. Seize the day, seize the minute, seize the second, and use it for all it’s worth. One thing that I definitely took for granted before was live performance: the ability to hang out in a space with a few mates, have a drink or three, and share collectively in an experience with loved ones, enemies and strangers. When we came out of lockdown the first time, I resolved to go to any event I could. Whether it was a gig, a panel, a show – hell, even an opera – I wanted to soak it all in.

Garage Party, the new show from the locally made and internationally acclaimed Modern Māori Quartet, feels like the best justification for not taking live performance for granted. It conjures up the spirit of having a piss-up with some of your more talented friends, riffing on songs everybody knows into the wee hours of the night. It takes all of the joy of that kind of spontaneous hang out, but it turns the class and the talent factor right up. The Civic’s Wintergarden is fancier than your garage, and the Modern Māori Quartet are better performers than your mates. (And absolutely better dressed: these dudes rock suits like they invented them.)

If you’re unfamiliar with the Modern Māori Quartet, you’ve been missing out. The core quartet consists of James Tito, Maaka Pohatu, Matariki Whatarau and Francis Kora, but Tito sits this gig out, with Tom Knowles stepping in as the token Pākehā. The quartet are both a twist on and a tribute to the Māori showbands of old: the Hi-Marks, the Māori Hi-Five and, of course, The Howard Morrison Quartet. While the bulk of the show are tunes from across the world and across the decades, it’s fleshed out by a fair amount of banter, chill skits and charisma-plus charm. When you go see the Modern Māori Quartet, you’re not just going to a gig. You’re going to a good, old-fashioned show.

The Modern Māori Quartet. From left to right: Frances Kora, Maaka Pohatu, Matariki Whatarau and Tom Knowles.

Including a token Pākehā in the show is a stroke of genius. It allows the band to sit fully within the showband persona, while also indulging in some good-natured white-dude mockery. We all know that guy who can clear out a party simply by looking at a guitar sideways, and having that guy on stage to poke fun at makes for a reliable punchline. Knowles plays the hapless role well, but also more than holds his own as a musician. He’s the butt of the joke when the comedy needs him to be, but then seamlessly falls back in tune when the musical performance demands it.

Garage Party splits the difference between the joyful chaos of, well, a garage piss-up, and the polish that’s inherent to every Modern Māori Quartet show. Even if the performance can feel a bit ramshackle at times, it’s more than made up for by their pure charisma and the fact that they’re so good at making a song soar. Anybody can put a half decent cover of ‘Slipping Away’ together, but not anybody can smash ‘I Wanna Dance with Somebody’, ‘Girls Just Wanna Have Fun’ and ‘Total Eclipse of the Heart’ into a medley that gets the Wintergarden absolutely shaking. You need the talent, and you need the range. The Modern Māori Quartet have both.

It feels right to end 2020 with a show like Garage Party. It’s the most trite thing to state, and restate, but we’re lucky to see live performance in New Zealand at all. In a normal year I’d probably see about 50 live shows. This year I’ll barely crack 10. Across the world, audiences aren’t sharing space with performers, but watching them on screens, and on screens within screens. That we get to see live performance at all is a blessing. That we get to see people as talented as the Modern Māori Quartet perform is a near miracle.

The Modern Māori Quartet: Garage Party is at the Wintergarden at The Civic, Auckland, through to December 20. You can book tickets here.