
Listen: The Politics of Collecting – from Banks and Solander to Today
Hear botanists and researchers discuss the shifting politics of collecting and classifying plants, from both Māori and Pākehā perspectives.
Free museum entry for New Zealanders and people living in New Zealand
Open every day 10am-6pm
(except Christmas Day)
Free museum entry for New Zealanders and people living in New Zealand
The complications of the word ‘traditional’? Why ‘reMāorification’ is a better word than ‘decolonisation’. How contemporary artists are retelling the inherited Pākehā-dominant histories of our nation. The collision of cultures. Read articles written by Te Papa staff.
Hear botanists and researchers discuss the shifting politics of collecting and classifying plants, from both Māori and Pākehā perspectives.
Mātauranga Māori curator Dougal Austin offers an indigenous perspective on first contact between Māori and Cook's men in Tamatea (Dusky Sound).
‘In 1994, Samoan novelist and scholar Albert Wendt was an advisor for the planned Pacific exhibitions. Senior Curator Pacific Cultures Sean Mallon describes how Albert Wendt requested that Te Papa abandon the use of terms like ‘traditional art’ in our labels and display signage. ‘Traditional means nothing to me!’ he said.’
How do museums learn to tell the truth about what they hold in order to become “decolonised archives”?
On 26 January 1779, the Hawaiian high chief Kalani‘ōpu‘u took this cloak, which he was wearing, and draped it over the shoulders of the English explorer Captain James Cook. It was donated to the Dominion Museum in 1912 and in July 2020, it returned home to Hawai‘i.
‘The story of Poetua is one of encounters in the Pacific during the late 1700s – a time when very different cultures and different worlds met, or some would say “collided”.’