zaterdag 31 december 2022
donderdag 29 december 2022
woensdag 28 december 2022
The bosom of Abraham (Michael Parekowhai, 1999) - Auckland Art gallery, Auckland
Michael
Parekowhai
Ngariki
Rotoawe, Ngati Whakarongo
The Bosom
of Abraham 1999
Ink on lightbox, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki
Kōwhaiwai patterns are customarily found within the rafters of the wharenui
or whare tūpuna, the ancestral house. A place
of tribal identity and council, the wharenui is multifaceted in its purpose. In
describing he wharenui of his iwi, Michael Parekōwhai says: ‘[it]
is not used anymore, but it is abandoned only in the physical sense. This is
because we know we belong to this place. We carry its spirit with us, wherever
we go …. Our living marae is really our suburban family home….’
For many urban-dwelling Māori this is a familiar scenario, in which the
emotional and cultural values of the papa kāinga (original home, village), where the marae
is located, are transferred to the suburban home. In Christian ideology the ‘bosom
of Abraham’ relates to heaven and in te ao Māori (the Māori worldview) the term te poho, or bosom,
appears in many place names to refer to the nourishment and nurturing of the
land.