Place-making: Wānanga based photographic approaches

Rodrigo Hill, T. Roa
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Ka matakitaki iho au ki te riu o Waikato Ano nei hei kapo kau ake maaku Ki te kapu o taku ringa, The words above are from the poem Māori King Tawhiao wrote expressing his love for his homelands of the Waikato and the region known today as the King Country. The words translate to: “I look down on the valley of Waikato, As though to hold it in the hollow of my hand.” Now imagine a large-scale photograph depicting a close-up frame of cupped hands trying to hold something carefully. The words above inform Professor Tom Roa and Dr. Rodrigo Hill’s current research project titled Te Nehenehenui - The Ancient Enduring Beauty in the Great Forest of the King Country. With this project still in its early stages the research team will present past collaborations which they will show leads into new ideas and discussions about photography, wānanga, and place representation. They focus on Māori King Tawhiao’s finding refuge in Te Nehenehenui, later called the King Country in his honour. He led many of his Waikato people into this refuge as a result of the British Invasion and confiscation of their Waikato lands in the latter part of the nineteenth century. The love of and for those lands prompted him to compose his ‘maioha’ - this poem painting a word-picture of these spaces which their photography humbly aims to portray. The project advances the use of wānanga (forums and meetings through which knowledge is discussed and passed on) and other reflective practices, engaging with mana whenua and providing a thread which will guide the construction of the photographic images. The name Te Nehenhenui was conceptualised by Polynesian ancestors who travelled from Tahiti and were impressed with the beauty of the land and the vast verdant forests of the King Country territories in the North Island of Aotearoa New Zealand. The origins of the name and further relevant historical accounts have been introduced and discussed by Professor Tom Roa (Ngāti Apakura, Ngāti Hinewai), Shane Te Ruki (Ngāti Unu, Ngāti Kahu) and Doug Ruki (Ngāti Te Puta I Te Muri, Ngāti Te Kanawa, Ngāti Peehi) in the TVNZ Waka Huia documentary series. The documentary provides a compelling account of the origins of the name Te Nehenehenui, thus informing this project’s core ideas and objectives. The research fuses wānanga, that is Mātauranga Māori, and photographic research approaches in novel ways. It highlights the importance of local Waikato-Maniapoto cosmological narratives and Māori understandings of place in their intersecting with the Western discipline of photography. This practice-led research focuses on photography and offers innovative forms of critical analysis and academic argumentation by constructing, curating, and presenting the photographic work as a public gallery exhibition. For this edition of the LINK Conference, the research team will present early collaborations and current research developments exploring place-making and wānanga as both methodology and photography practice.
场所制作:Wānanga基于摄影方法
Ka matakitaki iho au ki The riu o Waikato Ano nei hei kapo kau ake maaku ki te kapu o taku ringa,这句话出自tawhao国王的诗Māori,表达了他对家乡怀卡托和今天被称为“国王之国”的地区的热爱。这句话翻译过来就是:“我俯视着怀卡托山谷,仿佛把它握在我的手心。”现在想象一幅大尺度的照片,描绘了一个特写画面,两只手盘成杯状,试图小心地握住某样东西。以上这些话为Tom Roa教授和Rodrigo Hill博士目前的研究项目提供了信息,该项目名为The Nehenehenui -国王国家大森林中的古老持久之美。由于该项目仍处于早期阶段,研究团队将展示过去的合作,他们将展示有关摄影,wānanga和地点表现的新想法和讨论。他们的重点是Māori塔怀奥国王在尼赫内赫努伊找到了避难所,后来被称为国王之国,以纪念他。19世纪后半叶,由于英国入侵并没收了怀卡托人的土地,他带领许多怀卡托人进入了这个避难所。对这些土地的热爱促使他创作了他的“maioha”——这首诗描绘了这些空间的文字画面,他们的摄影谦逊地旨在描绘这些空间。该项目推进了wānanga(论坛和会议,通过论坛和会议讨论和传递知识)和其他反思实践的使用,参与mana whenua并提供指导摄影图像构建的线索。尼亨赫努伊这个名字是由来自塔希提岛的波利尼西亚祖先构想出来的,他们对新西兰奥特罗阿北岛国王国家领土的美丽土地和广阔的翠绿森林印象深刻。在新西兰电视台Waka Huia系列纪录片中,Tom Roa教授(Ngāti Apakura, Ngāti Hinewai)、Shane Te Ruki (Ngāti Unu, Ngāti Kahu)和Doug Ruki (Ngāti Te Puta I Te Muri, Ngāti Te Kanawa, Ngāti Peehi)介绍和讨论了这个名字的起源和进一步相关的历史记载。该纪录片提供了一个令人信服的关于Te Nehenehenui这个名字的起源的描述,从而告知了这个项目的核心思想和目标。这项研究融合了wānanga,即Mātauranga Māori和摄影研究的新方法。它强调了当地怀卡托-马尼阿波托宇宙学叙事的重要性,以及Māori在与西方摄影学科交叉时对地方的理解。这种以实践为主导的研究侧重于摄影,并通过构建、策划和展示摄影作品作为公共画廊展览,提供批判性分析和学术论证的创新形式。在这一期的LINK会议上,研究团队将展示早期的合作和目前的研究进展,探索场所制作和wānanga作为方法论和摄影实践。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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