Education
Bachelor of Māori Visual Arts, Massey University, 2000
Masters in Māori Visual Arts, Massey University, 2003
Taepa is currently the Kaihautu Toi Māori - Director of Māori Arts at the College of Creative Arts at Massey University.
Bachelor of Māori Visual Arts, Massey University, 2000
Masters in Māori Visual Arts, Massey University, 2003
Taepa is currently the Kaihautu Toi Māori - Director of Māori Arts at the College of Creative Arts at Massey University.
He reproduces the intricate forms of kowhaiwhai using modern materials and manufacturing processes including digital routers, acrylic laminates, stencils on Polyvinyl chloride pipes and steel, and digitally carved plywood. The artist has said Kōwhaiwhai is an expression of the way our ancestors saw the world in their time. Now we’re taught to see the positive space and not the space around lieutenant
How do you get to that level? That’s what fires me up.
He cites Robert Jahnke, Shane Cotton and Kura Te Waru Rewiri (who all taught him at art school) as significant influences, along with Māori language revivalists including Taiarahia Black, Ian Christensen and Pare Richardson. Selected exhibitions: 2001 Purangiaho – Seeing Clearly, Auckland Art Gallery 2002 Mangopare, Pataka Art + Museum, Porirua 2005 Manawa Taki – The Pulsing Heart, City Gallery Wellington 2005 RāHui: Principle of Regulation, Te Manawa, Palmerston North 2007 Telecom Prospect 2007: New Art New Zealand, City Gallery Wellington 2009 Mua Ki Muri, Pataka Art + Museum, Porirua 2009 PLASTIC MĀORI – A Tradition of Innovation, The Dowse Art Museum, Lower Hutt 2010 Double Vision: When Artists Collaborate, Pataka Art + Museum 2011 Ka kata te po: Hemi Macgregor, Saffronn Te Ratana and Ngataiharuru Taepa, Te Manawa 2013 Ka kata te po shown as part of the 5th Auckland Triennial, Auckland Art Gallery 2015 Te Tini a Pitau: 12 years of kowhaiwhai, Pataka Art + Museum In 2015 Taepa collaborated with Michel Tuffery on a light display commissioned to mark the opening of Pukeahu National War Memorial Park in Wellington.
In 2000 Taepa was elected onto Te Atinga, the visual arts committee of the Māori arts advocacy organisation Toi Māori Aotearoa. Taepa"s work is held in a number of public collections including the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Wellington City Council and the Auckland War Memorial Museum.
Ngataiharuru recalls that when his father began to study art at Whitireia Polytechnic "I would sit around the kitchen table and listen to people like Manos Nathan, Darcy Nicholas, Robyn Kahukiwa and Ngamoana Raureti.
All these people were talking about the issues of the time.. I have been really fortunate in that way and it"s shaped my work and how I work. lieutenant inspired me and also gave me a little bit of knowledge, hearing about the struggles they faced as Māori artists, the different issues and how they have dealt with them." Interview with Taepa about his World War I commemorative work Te Ahi Kaa, Radio New Zealand National, 2015 Review of 2015 exhibition Tipua Eye Contact, 2015 Review of collaborative work Ka kata te po Eye Contact, 2011.