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  2. Whakairo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whakairo

    Carving schools balanced producing art for their own people with commercial works, with many of the most successful being Te Arawa (Ngāti Whakaue, Ngāti Pikiao and Ngāti Tarāwhai), located near Rotorua, during the tourism boom to the area in the 1870s, with an increased need for carved works such as the model village at Whakarewarewa, and ...

  3. Tiki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiki

    By extension, a tiki is a large or small wooden, pounamu or other stone carving in humanoid form, although this is a somewhat archaic usage in the Māori language, where a tiki is usually a hei-tiki, a pendant worn around the neck.

  4. Māori culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Māori_culture

    Toi whakairo or just whakairo is the Māori traditional art of carving [98] in wood, stone or bone. Some surviving whakairo, or carvings, are over 500 years old. Wood carvings were used to decorate houses, fence-poles, containers, taiaha, tool handles, and other objects. Large-scale stone-face carvings were sometimes created.

  5. New Zealand art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Zealand_art

    Carving was done in three media: wood, bone, and stone. As an oral peoples, for Māori carving recorded genealogy, documented events and preserved traditions and stories. [ 8 ] [ 12 ] Examples of carved items include buildings, weapons including taiaha , musical instruments ( taonga pūoro ), special containers ( waka huia ), boats (waka) and ...

  6. Waka (canoe) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waka_(canoe)

    Māori quickly learned the superiority of this material, especially for carving. Māori learnt to ask sailors to sharpen 8-inch-long (20 cm) ships' nails to a chisel point on a ship's wheel in exchange for fish. This period between 1779 and 1820 has been called the golden age of Māori wood carving. [14] Much of the carving was confined to waka ...

  7. Pouwhenua - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pouwhenua

    Pouwhenua in front of Civic Offices, Hereford Street, Christchurch, New Zealand. Pouwhenua or pou whenua (land post), are carved wooden posts used by Māori, the indigenous peoples of New Zealand to mark territorial boundaries or places of significance.

  8. Manaia (mythological creature) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manaia_(mythological_creature)

    Manaia pounamu carving. The Manaia is a mythological creature in Māori culture, and is a common motif in Māori carving [1] and jewellery.. The Manaia is usually depicted as having the head of a bird and the tail of a fish and the body of a man, though it is sometimes depicted as a bird, a serpent, or a human figure in profile.

  9. Hei matau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hei_matau

    A hei matau is a bone or greenstone carving in the shape of a highly stylised fish hook. They represent good luck and safe travel across water. They represent good luck and safe travel across water. [ 1 ]