Iti te Kupu: Nui te Kōrero | Tiny Statements: The Power of BadgesTouring exhibition
He iti kupu ki te manawa. He nui kōrero ki te marea.
Neke atu i te 200 ngā tāpine hirahira, he tohu whai mana, he tohu tuakiri, he kura mahora rangiwhāwhā.
Tūhuratia ēnei iti pounamu.
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Badges are small objects that tell big stories. These miniature billboards broadcast statements of identity and belonging.
Explore over 200 badges expressing commitment and resistance in this small but mighty exhibition.
When | Āhea
Ka tāpoi huri noa i Aotearoa Touring Aotearoa New Zealand soon
Where | Ki hea
Tirohia te hōtaka o ngā whakaaturanga kei raro Check the tour schedule below for venues
Iti te Kupu, Nui te Kōrero | Tiny Statements: The Power of Badges invites you to experience symbols worn to show pride, defiance, and community across the motu. See author Margaret Mahy’s badge-covered scarf and a Polynesian Panthers badge commemorating 50 years of fighting racism.
You’ll likely recognise many more!
Activation
This case features protest badges that bring activism into everyday life, calling for justice, fairness, and a better world. The wearer declares their allegiance to a social cause, from the environment to women’s welfare.
Belonging
In this case, badges from clubs and associations across Aotearoa New Zealand reveal identity and community. A badge proudly states shared interests and achievements, travelling with the wearer into the wider world.
The words and symbols we’ve worn. This small book with a big heart delves into Te Papa’s collections of over 1600 badges to examine how New Zealanders have used badges to join, belong, resist, defy and celebrate.
History curator Stephanie Gibson has a particular interest in how tiny things can have big impacts – especially in protest movements. She talks through some of these objects which feature in Te Papa’s collection, but also her personal one.
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.
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.
In 1987, the ground-breaking New Zealand Nuclear Free Zone, Disarmament, and Arms Control Act 1987 became law. New Zealand became the first Western-allied country to officially ban nuclear-armed and powered warships from its territory. History curator Stephanie Gibson looks at iconic symbols from the time.
Curator and badge enthusiast Steph Gibson shares one of her favourite objects in the collection, and explains the role badges played in our protest history.
This beret and badge were worn by the Reverend Alec Toleafoa when he spoke at the official New Zealand Government apology for the Dawn Raids, held on Sunday 1 August 2021 at the Auckland Town Hall.