Taku Huia Kaimanawa
Taku Huia Kaimanawa
Fiona Pardington
MTG Hawkes Bay
Tai Ahuriri, 1 Tennyson Street, Napier
19 June - 3 December 2023
The sacred huia bird is a powerful reminder of the concept of mana or rangitira. It’s symbolic value emphasised by its unique lineage, setting it apart from other birds in the spiritual realm of Tāne Mahuta. Originally named Manutea, the huia's body turned black to represent Te Kore, while its tail feathers were adorned with white edges to represent its journey through the heavens.
For over twenty years, Fiona Pardington has sought out and photographed taonga of the natural and cultural world held in collections worldwide. Some seventeen years after her first photographs of the now extinct huia, Pardington came to her iwi rohe, Te-Matau-a-Māui Hawke’s Bay, to photograph huia held in the Hawke’s Bay Museums Trust collection.
In what must be considered a distinct project, Pardington photographs huia in museum storehouses and private collections infusing these birds with new presence through exquisite large-scale portraits such as these. In this way, these images capture and temper a second extinction as the lifespan of these now century-old birds in taxidermy is limited also.
Pardington has talked of photography as a place of memory and mourning. These haunting photographs mourn the loss of this sacred bird, not by way of laying them to rest, but in such a way that huia are brought into the realm of the living like treasures returned to the world.
All works courtesy of the artist and Starkwhite Gallery.
We need your help to continue providing a year-round programme of online reviews, interviews, portfolios, videos and listings that is free for everyone to access. We’d also like to dream bigger with the services we offer to photographers and the visual arts.
We’ve partnered with Press Patron to give readers the opportunity to support PhotoForum Online.
Every donation helps.