A group of young women seated in front of the whare whakairo are
busily weaving kono out of harakeke. These kono were generally
produced for large events such as hākari, or the harvesting and
distributing of seasonal food crops, which required communal
effort. The young women would have been given the task of making
these elementary food baskets as a form of apprenticeship: simple
kono are one of the first items young aspiring weavers would be
expected to master.
The young woman at the centre of the group is distinct as she
has a huia feather in her hair and a korowai draped diagonally
across the chest, hallmarks of chiefly lineage and position. She
appears to be slightly older than the other weavers and is
finishing the plaited rim of a large kete used for harvesting crops
of rīwai and kūmara. Another chiefly woman with moko kauwae and
draped in korowai sits in the mahau slightly removed from the
others. It is interesting to think what the message might be here.
Is she supervising the group? Or perhaps she is set apart because
of her rank and status. Lindauer constructs shifts in tone and mood
in the one image.
An analysis of the maihi and amo carvings of the meetinghouse
tells us that they are of Ngāti Kahungunu tribal origin and were
likely borrowed from photographs taken by Samuel Carnell. Lindauer
spent time in Pākōwhai, Hastings, hosted by Peti Karaitiana in 1885
and painted several portraits, including that of Airini Donnelly
and family.1 In his painting
the carvings are presented with traditional kōkōwai staining. The
angle of the maihi cuts into the blue sky, inserting a dynamic form
into the picture plane. The activities of the weavers in the
foreground are in contrast to a sleeping kurī in the bottom right
corner of the painting complete with a fish skeleton at its
feet.
Nigel Borell
(originally published in Gottfried Lindauer's New
Zealand: The Māori Portraits, edited by Ngahiraka Mason and
Zara Stanhope, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki and AUP,
2016.)
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