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Tia Ranginui: Gonville Gothic

Ticket Information

  • Free Admission

Dates

  • Wed 27 Oct 2021, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Thu 28 Oct 2021, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Fri 29 Oct 2021, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Sat 30 Oct 2021, 10:00am–5:00pm
  • Sun 31 Oct 2021, 10:00am–5:00pm

Show more sessions

Restrictions

All Ages

In her new series Tua o Tāwauwau/Away with the Fairies (2020), Whanganui photographer Tia Ranginui (Ngāti Hine Oneone) addresses patupaiarehe. In Māori myth, they were the first people of New Zealand. They lived in the forests and mountains, building their homes from swirling mists. They had pale skin and red or fair hair and could be hostile to trespassers. Redheads and albinos were often assumed to be the result of interbreeding. Today, some speculate that patupaiarehe descended from early Europeans who discovered Aotearoa eons before Polynesians. Ranginui says such theories are 'exploiting our stories, against us’.

Ranginui's theatrical images feature a man and a woman conjuring mist. They were shot in suburban Gonville and Castlecliff (even though patupaiarehe supposedly live in the forests, away from people), and in full daylight (even though they are nocturnal). Now, it seems, patupaiarehe are out and about, living among us—hiding in full sight. They pose in the dinghy in the artist’s backyard, as if it were a Viking longship. Some titles refer to Norse myth.

An earlier series, Hours between Sleep (2016), was made while Ranginui was battling with insomnia following a relationship breakup. Unable to sleep, she photographed people and places at night around Gonville and Castlecliff. The images have a voyeuristic, menacing quality, with the artist hovering over people or lurking outside the places where they sleep. The show also includes images shot in Whanganui’s Savage Club and during the flood of the Whanganui River in 2015.

In her new series Tua o Tāwauwau/Away with the Fairies (2020), Whanganui photographer Tia Ranginui (Ngāti Hine Oneone) addresses patupaiarehe. In Māori myth, they were the first people of New Zealand. They lived in the forests and mountains, building their homes from swirling mists. They had pale skin and red or fair hair and could be hostile to trespassers. Redheads and albinos were often assumed to be the result of interbreeding. Today, some speculate that patupaiarehe descended from early Europeans who discovered Aotearoa eons before Polynesians. Ranginui says such theories are 'exploiting our stories, against us’.

Ranginui's theatrical images feature a man and a woman conjuring mist. They were shot in suburban Gonville and Castlecliff (even though patupaiarehe supposedly live in the forests, away from people), and in full daylight (even though they are nocturnal). Now, it seems, patupaiarehe are out and about, living among us—hiding in full sight. They pose in the dinghy in the artist’s backyard, as if it were a Viking longship. Some titles refer to Norse myth.

An earlier series, Hours between Sleep (2016), was made while Ranginui was battling with insomnia following a relationship breakup. Unable to sleep, she photographed people and places at night around Gonville and Castlecliff. The images have a voyeuristic, menacing quality, with the artist hovering over people or lurking outside the places where they sleep. The show also includes images shot in Whanganui’s Savage Club and during the flood of the Whanganui River in 2015.

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