Hīnaki: Contemplation of a Form
Ko te hīnaki, ko ōna ahunga whakairo me ōna tauira manganga, he mahinga toi nui whakaharahara o te ahurea Māori. Ko tōna whakamahinga hei mauhere tuna, ko tōna tikanga mahi, tae atu ki ōna rauemi waihanga, he kōrero i ahu mai i te mātauranga ā-iwi me te taiao.
He tirohanga whānui tēnei whakaaturanga ki tēnei mea te hīnaki. Atu i te whakaatu i ēnei taonga, ka aro anō tēnei whakaaturanga ki ngā pahī e rua a ētahi whare taonga i mua, waihoki ki te hononga a te Māori ki ngā awa whakahirahira e rua me ngā urupare toi hou e pā ana ki te hīnaki.
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Hīnaki, with their sculptural dimensions and intricate designs, are a distinctive Māori art form of great cultural significance. In their function as eel traps, their form, and their materials, they express mātauranga ā-iwi of te taiao.
This exhibition provides a broad experience of hīnaki. As well as displaying these taonga, it focuses on two early museum expeditions, Māori relationships with two significant awa, and contemporary artworks related or responding to hīnaki.
10 Jun 2023 – 19 May 2024
Toi Art, Level 5
Free entry
Wheelchair accessible
Soft lighting
Gallery soundtrack with voice, percussion, synthesiser, and harp
Two low plinths without barriers
Two videos with subtitles in English and te reo Māori, headsets, and seating
Large print labels available in English and te reo Māori
Audio guide with transcripts
He pūkenga, he tohu
He tikanga whai pūkenga te waihanga hīnaki. Ka mounutia, ā, ka tauria ki ngā riponga awa, ka pōria rānei ki ngā takere awa. Nā te mea e huri kōaro kē ana te waha o te hīnaki, ka rere ana te tuna ki roto, korekore ana e āhei te puta ki waho.
He matatini te whatunga mai o te hīnaki i ngā rau kaha pēnei i te tā o te mangemange, i te aka o te kiekie, i te aka tororaro, i te peka mānuka me te muka i ētahi wā anō. Ko ngā ingoa ka hāngai ki tōna hanganga, ki tōna āhuahanga, ki tōna whakamahinga rānei, pēnei i te hīnaki waharua (e rua ngā waha) me te hīnaki tukutuku rānei.
He tohu te hīnaki o te ao Māori tūturu, he whakatinanatanga hoki o ngā uara me ngā tikanga pēnei i te mahinga kai me te manaaki. E ai ki te kōrero, nā te tipua, nā Māui-Tikitiki-a-Taranga i hanga te hīnaki e kīia nei ko te ‘akura’. Ko te kupu tēnei mō te waha kōaro o te hīnaki.
Activities
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Watch: Matthew McIntyre-Wilson, Māori artist
Hīnaki are skilfully made forms used as eel traps. They are baited and then placed in a river’s current, or weighted down on the riverbed where the eels enter the inverted openings and can’t escape. Wellington artist Matthew McIntyre-Wilson talks to Mātauranga Māori Curator Isaac Te Awa about learning from the hīnaki in our collection.