Te Pokiha Taranui (?–1901), who was a notable New Zealand Māori tribal leader and soldier commissioned traditional carvers to carve this Pātaka. A Pātaka is a traditional Māori storehouse that was used to keep preserved food such as fish, birds, and seed safe from kiore or Pacific rats.
Completed in the early 1870s, the pātaka symbolized the status and power of Te Pokiha. The ancestral figures illustrate his genealogy and notable ancestors of the Te Pokiha tribe. Carved from totara and painted red, with black panels, all the carved figures have paua shell inset eyes.
Feature on each side are naturalistic embracing couples
Te Puawai o Te Arawa, Pātaka
- Exhibit: Te Puawai o Te Arawa, Pātaka
- Materials: Wood
- Date: 1870s
- Culture: Māori, Te Arawa tribe
- Origin: Maketu, Bay of Plenty, North Island, New Zealand
- Museum: Auckland War Memorial Museum
A Tour of the Auckland War Memorial Museum, Tāmaki Paenga Hira
- Te Puawai o Te Arawa, Pātaka
- Tiki Gateway Carving
- Hinana
- World War I, Military Aircraft Propellers
- Kave, Goddess Figure
- Nazi Germany Badges
- Kumete Koha
A Tour of New Zealand’s Museums
- Museums in Auckland
- Auckland War Memorial Museum
- New Zealand Maritime Museum
- Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki
- Museums in Wellington
- Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa
- Museums in Christchurch
- Canterbury Museum, Christchurch
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“As man disappears from sight, the land remains.”
– Maori Proverb
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Photo Credit: JOM
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