Te Motunui Epa

Buchanan, Rachel

Notes
251 pages
illustrations (some colour), portraits
Summary: 'This is a story about the power of art to help us find a way through the darkness. It is about how art can bring out the best in us, and the worst. The artworks in question are five wooden panels carved in the late 1700s by ancestors in Taranaki.' Commissioned, created, mounted, dismantled, hidden, found, sold, smuggled, on-sold, advertised for auction, withdrawn from auction, touched, judged, debated, locked up, hidden, found, re-sold, returned. This ... examines how five interconnected carved panels, Te Motunui Epa, have journeyed across the world and changed international law, practices and understanding on the protection and repatriation of stolen cultural treasures. By placing these taonga/tupuna at the centre of the story, Rachel Buchanan (Taranaki, Te Atiawa) presents a narrative, richly illustrated, that provides a fascinating and rare account of art, ancestors and power. (Publisher)
Librarian's Miscellania
20221219141528.0
Location edition Bar Code due date
Non-fiction Shelves A5253
Dewey:344.93097
call #:BUC
ISBN:9781990046582
pub:2022
Subjects