- Cape Kidnappers,
known in Māori as Te
Kauwae-a-Māui and
officially gazetted as Cape
Kidnappers / Te
Kauwae-a-Māui, is a
headland at the
southeastern extremity...
- Tā moko is the
permanent marking or
tattooing as
customarily practised by Māori, the
indigenous people of New Zealand. It is one of the five main Polynesian...
-
stretches from Māhia
Peninsula in the
northeast to Cape
Kidnappers / Te
Kauwae-a-Māui in the southwest, a
distance of some 90
kilometres (56 mi). Captain...
-
Chief of Ngāti
Tamaoho Letter from
Epiha Putini,
Arama Karaka and
Wetere Kauwae to
Donald McLean,
written in Māngere, 5 May 1854 Born c. 1816 Died 22 March...
- Part 1. – The
Kauwae-runga. New Plymouth:
Thomas Avery. p. 65. Smith, S.
Percy (1913). The Lore of the Warewananga: Part 1. – The
Kauwae-runga. New Plymouth:...
- list)
Kauwae 09 : a
series of
three exhibitions from the
Kauwae Group, a
national collective of Māori
women artists, (2009). Te
Matapuna Trust.
Kauwae Group...
- on the
entire face,
while in
women it was
mostly restricted to the lips (
kauwae) and chins.
These tattoos were
traditionally part of the
initiation into...
-
Peninsula Āwhitu
Peninsula Bream Head Cape
Brett Peninsula Cape
Kidnappers / Te
Kauwae-a-Māui Cape
Turnagain Coromandel Peninsula Karangahape Peninsula Karikari...
-
Science + History,
Palmerston North. 2011
MAORI ART
MARKet Porirua 2009
Kauwae 09
Kauwae Group, a
national collective of Mäori
women artists.
Tairawhiti Museum...
- Uku, a
collective of Māori clay workers.
Corneal was also
involved with
Kauwae, a
collective of Māori
women artists formed in 1997; Te Rōpū o Ngā Wāhine...