Meeting-house Paintings These paintings are in the meeting-house Hinetapora, which was opened in 1896 and which stands at Mangahanea, near Ruatoria. Paintings such as these (there used to be many in Maori houses, though most have disappeared now) are valuable as historical documents, as showing how people thought and felt about things in those days. And they are valuable because their liveliness and freshness of approach make them attractive to look at. They are less important, of course, than early Maori art; but they cannot simply be dismissed as ‘decadent’. In Europe until recently, there was a similar art which belonged to villagers—‘folk art’, it is called. Maori art like this is also folk art, and is equally worth preserving.
Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.
By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.
Your session has expired.