What are some of the symbols of resistance in Aotearoa?
Effective protests have a unifying message and a shared set of symbols or images. Many protests will also involve chanting, songs, and speeches to make sure that people understand what the protest is about.
Activity: Guess Who?
Interpret symbols, text, and visual imagery for meaning.
Te Papa collects many items to help keep a record of our history as a country. Protest signs and protest art give us great insights into the motivations behind the protestors of the day.
Take a look at the protest signs and badges below with a friend or group. If you are in a group, print them out large and put them up around your space so it is easy to gather around each image and discuss them.
Look at each of the protest items in turn and see if you can figure out what you think the protestor was upset about. What are the symbols, text or imagery that helped you to work that out?
Click again on any of the collection items to read about each protest cause. (The slideshow is best viewed full-screen.)
Activity: You can’t sink a rainbow
Design your own protest symbols, slogans and chants.
Have a look at this protest badge from Te Papa's collection and discuss together:
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Have a think about the issues that upset you at the moment. Try to think about social or environmental issues that affect a great deal of people in your community, rather than an individual issue that may be only your concern.
List these ideas and then choose the one that feels most important to you. Brainstorm symbols, shapes or elements that you could use to visually tell your story to an audience. Consider the colours that will best communicate your issues visually.
Draw a circle on a page that has a diameter of 10cm and begin to draw your protest badge design.
Consider a slogan or phrase. You may want to ask a friend before you add any text, if they can guess what the cause is. If the meaning is clear, you may not need to add anything extra to the badge at all.
If others in your group have completed badge designs, exhibit them for others to see. You may want to write an artist's statement to explain your visual choices.
Activity: The power of music for change
Curate an activist’s playlist.
Protests throughout time have inspired musicians to write music. Studying and celebrating the lyrics and poetry of protest music is a powerful way for us to understand the language of social change and the issues that stir up our heart and soul. We’ve put together a Spotify playlist of protest songs (or, with videos: Kia hiwa rā! on YouTube) from across time and around the world.
Take a listen to a couple of tracks on the playlist with the lyrics downloaded in front of you:
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Now create your own playlist of protest music. You might like to focus on a broad concept like ‘ seeking justice’ or ‘ equality for all’ or you might want to choose a specific issue, such as Te Tiriti or feminism.
Research artists and songs that are related to your playlists theme, and select up to five songs that you like the most.
Write the liner notes or record voice notes explaining:
the way in which each song is related to the playlist theme
a lyric that clearly expresses that it is a protest song
what you specifically like about this song (the style, the rhythm, the bassline, the lyrics etc).
Share your playlist with an audience on youtube or Spotify. Make sure you add your liner notes to the description.
Extra links for the extra curious
Go down amazing wormholes with this curated suite of links.
London School of Economics and Political Science: Using signs and symbols in protest art – a film showing the steps of an art activity to make a protest brick or placard.
The small but powerful effects of tiny activism – Te Papa history curator Stephanie Gibson has a particular interest in how tiny things can have big impacts – especially in protest movements. She talks through some of the tiny protest objects which feature in Te Papa’s collection.
Protest badges at Te Papa – explore the protest badge collection held at Te Papa on Collections Online.
Freedom to Sing – this Spotlight collection brings together some of New Zealand’s great protest songs from NZ on Screen.
Untold History: The Raised Fist Afro Comb: Defining a Statement – an animation about how the raised fist symbol and a comb created a product that came to symbolise African-American history, culture, protest, and pride.
Stuff: How do you memorialise a protest? – an article on the ways in which museums gather symbols of protest in our past.