Page 68 - Constructing Craft
P. 68

Pine Taiapa standing with items of Maori wood carvings (probably his own work) for the
               Kahungunu Meeting House in Nuhaka. Photograph taken circa 1940s by an unidentified
               photographer. Alexander Turnbull Library.

               We have been introduced to only a small sampling of the ‘pioneers’ of craft. Many

               have been selected for what they represent rather than for their standing as leaders

               in the history of craft in New Zealand. Some were pioneers in two ways. They were
               early (European) settlers in New Zealand and they were New Zealand’s first

               craftspeople. Later, the interwar craftspeople were dubbed ‘pioneers’ by the

               craftspeople of the post-war studio craft movement in recognition of their dedication
               to their craft in the face of many obstacles and their early adoption of studio craft.

               The former, in the main, did not think of themselves as anything other than craft
               workers or tradesmen, but the latter often felt that their craft had an ‘artistic’

               component and their membership of art societies gave substance to this claim –
               even if their position in such groups was considered inferior to the place of painters

               and sculptors. Māori craftspeople usually did not separate craft from art. Craft for

               them was both craft and art. The craftspeople of the later movement at first
               positioned themselves in a similar way. They were content to exhibit their work with

               art societies or sell through a small but growing number of craft shops. But as the
               studio craft movement matured and craftspeople sought more recognition – and


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