Free museum entry for New Zealanders and people living in New Zealand

Watch: Ngā Taonga Tuku Iho

For a long time, museums and archival institutions have been a place where our taonga have been locked away; disconnected from the places and people whose stories they tell. Often they are hidden away in private and public connections, slowly trying to find the right home again.

And here we are, often desperate to have a relationship with these taonga, with our kōrero tuku iho. But the world of museums and archives isn’t easy to navigate, and sometimes accessing our mātauranga Māori can feel impossible.

Ngā Taonga Tuku Iho is a five-part series looking at the relationships we have as Māori with our taonga today, and with the practice of archiving. How can we gain access to our taonga, how can we breathe new life in these connections, and what do we dream of for the future of taonga care?

– Kahu Kutia

 

The first episode goes live on Friday 12 August, and each episode will follow every Friday after that. Watch the trailer below.

This series is directed and produced by Kahu Kutia, and hosted by storyteller and pūoro practitioner Khali Meari.

View the Ngā Taonga Tuku Iho playlist on YouTube (after August 12)

*“Ngā taonga tuku iho” refers to the continuing histories of cultural artefacts.

  • A woman stands looking directly into the camera. The camera is looking up at her

    Watch: Ngā Taonga Tuku Iho #2: You Are It, So Live It

    We meet Keri-Mei Zagrobelna (Te Āti Awa, Te Whānau-a-Apanui), a jewellery maker in Te Whanganui-a-Tara. Keri-Mei talks about her history with the collections at Te Papa, which spans all the way back to the work of her kuia.

  • A man stands looking directly into the camera in the Ngā Taonga archives, flanked by shelving

    Watch: Ngā Taonga Tuku Iho #3: Tukuna Kia Rere

    Khali meets up with Maimoa Toataua-Wallace, a staff member at Ngā Taonga Sound & Vision. Ngā Taonga is home of audiovisual archiving in Aotearoa. Movies, sound recordings, home videos, television, songs, anything to do with the audiovisual world, you can probably find it here!

  • Two women stand talking in a museum storeroom, surrounded by storage cabinets

    Watch: Ngā Taonga Tuku Iho #4: Repatriation

    Khali’s whakaaro (thoughts) turn towards all the ways our taonga might be brought home, to Aotearoa, and to their communities. Khali meets up with Amber Aranui, a researcher and a kaimahi at Te Papa in the repatriation team.

  • A woman stands in front of a marae looking into the camera

    Watch: Ngā Taonga Tuku Iho #5: Kaihahu Mahara

    Khali has one more question. When our taonga are cared for in and amongst the communities that they come from, what does this look like? How is it different from contemporary museum practices? And what tools can whānau use to take taonga care in to their own hands?