- Hine-nui-te-pō ("the
great woman of the night") in Māori legends, is a
goddess of
night and she
receives the
spirits of
humans when they die. She is the...
- the
mythological location of Kurawaka. She bore a
child with Tāne
named Hinetītama (otherwise
known as Hinenui-i-te-pō). Ruru,
Jacinta (2018-03-15). "Listening...
- It's the
Black Ferns rumble Ko Hineahuone, Ko
Hinetitama Ko
Hinenui te po From Hineahuone,
Hinetitama and
Hinenui te po we came Ki te whaiao, ki te ao...
- This
exhibition drew on Māori myth and symbolism. One of the pieces,
Hinetītama, is in the
permanent collection at Te Manawa. In 1995,
Kahukiwa exhibited...
- Hineahuone, from soil and with her
became the
father of
Hinetītama. Tāne
Mahuta concealed Hinetītama's parentage to her, and
together they had children. Upon...
-
Light and Life) the gallery's
display works such as
Robyn Kahukiwa's
Hinetitama (1980) and
Saffronn Te Rratana, Hemi
Macgregor and
Ngataihuru Taepa's...