The award-winning authors of this small book with a big heart delve into Te Papa’s collections of over 1600 badges to examine how New Zealanders have used badges to join, belong, resist, defy and celebrate. From protest groups and Girl Guides to sports clubs, animal breeds, tino rangatiratanga
tino rangatiratangasovereigntyMāori and suffrage – there has been a badge for almost every New Zealand cause and endeavour.
Newsroom, reviewed by Steve Braunias. “What gorgeous works of art. I'd rather frame them than wear them … the badges float in the white pages of Tiny Statements, torn from the bodies of their wearers, left to exist as the bric-à-brac of the New Zealand way of life.”
Ensemble magazine, Sunday Star-Times, reviewed by Tyson Beckett. “Like the objects in its pages, Tiny Statements is small but mighty.”
NZ Booklovers, reviewed by Lyn Potter. “I recommend this little book as a great conversation starter. It may surprise you … to discover what kind of badges your friends and relations once wore, what they fought for, achieved, or belonged to.”
New Zealand Listener, reviewed by Mark Broatch. “It’s a potted history of our protest but of celebration too … [they are] symbols of our principles, our aspirations, our pride.”
Stuff, How I write: Te Papa curator Stephanie Gibson.
Ensemble magazine, Sunday Star-Times, Stephanie Gibson interviewed by Tyson Beckett.
RNZ Nine to Noon, Stephanie Gibson interviewed by Katherine Ryan
Watch author, curator and badge enthusiast Stephanie Gibson share one of her favourite objects in the collection, and explain the role badges played in our protest history.
About the authors
Stephanie Gibson is Curator New Zealand Histories and Cultures at Te Papa. She researches the material and visual culture of protest, conflict and reform, as well as everyday life in Aotearoa New Zealand. Her continuing museological research focuses on museums and community participation. With Puawai Cairns and Matariki Williams, she was the author of Protest Tautohetohe, winner of the 2020 Ockham New Zealand Book Award for Illustrated Non-Fiction.
Claire Regnault is Senior Curator New Zealand Histories and Cultures at Te Papa and has worked as in the art gallery and museum sector since 1994. Her curatorial practice is eclectic in nature and she is particularly passionate about New Zealand’s fashion history. She is an active member of the Costume and Textile Association of New Zealand, and regularly contributes to the association’s symposia and journal. She is the author of Dressed, winner of the 2022 Ockham New Zealand Book Award for Illustrated Non-Fiction.
Based on collections featured in the book ‘Tiny Statements: A Social History of Aotearoa New Zealand in Badges’, this beautiful, decorative poster of a century’s worth of badge designs.
Te Papa holds over 1,300 community club badges and pins made by Trevor Dick in Petone, Wellington during the 1950s to early 1980s, under his company name T.M. Dick & Co Ltd. The collection provides an insight into the wide range of interests, both personal and professional, that brought New Zealanders together.