- Cora-Allan Lafaiki Twiss, Plant Samplers 1,2,3,7,8,9, 2020
- Ayesha Green, River Thames and View Hill; Plymouth and Lake Ellesmere, 2022
- Louise Pōtiki Bryant, Te Korowai a Kahukura, 2023
- Melissa Macleod, New Days (168/365), 2023
- Zina Swanson, Convolvulus Diaries, 2023
- Conor Clarke, As far as the eye can reach, 2023
- Te Kāhui Hono, He Taonga Mutunga Kore, 2023
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Herbarium Exhibition Essay
CollectionArt at Te Ara Ātea
Te Ara Ātea
Art
Te Ara Ātea Exhibition 2023: Herbarium
ImageCora-Allan Lafaiki Twiss, Plant Samplers 1,2,3,7,8,9, 2020
Ayesha Green, River Thames and View Hill; Plymouth and Lake Ellesmere, 2022
Louise Pōtiki Bryant, Te Korowai a Kahukura, 2023
Melissa Macleod, New Days (168/365), 2023
Zina Swanson, Convolvulus Diaries, 2023
Conor Clarke, As far as the eye can reach, 2023
Te Kāhui Hono, He Taonga Mutunga Kore, 2023
More InformationHerbarium on ArtNow
Herbarium
1 March - 1 September 2023
Te Ara Ātea
Image Credit: Cora-Allan Lafaiki Twiss, Plant Samplers 1, 2020. Traditional dyes on hiapo. Courtesy of Lincoln University Te Whare W?naka o Aoraki.
The process of collection was a laborious one. Multiple specimens were collected, sketched by the ship’s artists, dried on the ship’s sails or the sand, and then pressed. They returned to England in 1771 with around 350 species of New Zealand vascular plants, pressed between misprinted pages of Milton’s Paradise Lost. The majority of the collection is now held in the British Museum, with duplicates held by Te Papa Tongarewa and Manaaki Whenua.
Image Credit: Ayesha Green, River Thames and View Hill and Plymouth and Lake Ellesmere (installation view), 2023. Acrylic on canvas.
In this exhibition, artists approach this history from different perspectives. Ngāi Tahu artist Ayesha Green has long been interested in Joseph Banks and systems of classification, particularly the ways in which early botanical research and processes of re-naming contributed to both the amassing of new knowledge, and the loss of traditional and indigenous knowledge. The specimens were renamed by Banks and Solander, often not so subtly for themselves and members of the ship’s crew (i.e astelia banksii, Astelia solandri, Phormium cookianum). With the loss of the indigenous names came a loss of indigenous knowledge. In her paintings, River Thames and View Hill, and Plymouth and Lake Ellesmere, Green pairs the first diary entries alongside holotypes. A holotype is a single specimen and used to describe a new species. Once collected, this original holotype fixes and defines their species, with all other specimens compared to it. Undercutting the fixed nature of holotypes, Green presents the slippery realm of diary entries. Though diaries are often used as primary historical documents, the accounts by Banks and Cook contradict each other. While these texts are often used to bolster master narratives, Green’s presentation of them reminds us to examine their reliability.
This leads us to the work of Ngāi Tahu filmmaker, Louise Potiki-Bryant. For Louise, the history of plants in Aotearoa doesn't start with Cook's first voyage, nor the arrival of Polynesian settlers. Louise returns to a Ngāi Tahu creation story in which Tūterakiwhānoa, Marokura, and Kahukura shape the wreckage of Te Waka o Aoraki to form Te Waipounamu the South Island. It was Kahukura's role to adorn the land with plants and birds, and in her film Louise responds to this pūrakau by reuniting indigenous names with local native flora.
Image Credit: Louise P?tiki Bryant, Te Korowai a Kahukura (installation view), 2023. Single channel custom aspect video.
Different world-views intersect in these points of departure. Artworks by indigenous, moana artists consider the plants central to their cultural practices and those of their t?puna. The Banks/Solander collection has been crucial in understanding the indigenous flora of Aotearoa New Zealand, but particularly in the face of the rapid spread of exotic plant species, many of which have been invasive and detrimental to a fragile indigenous ecosystem. Ayesha Green’s work grapples with this paradox, seeking knowledge about the history of her whenua through the work of early colonial scientists.
As interest in the regeneration of indigenous species around Aotearoa increases, more questions and challenges come forward. After European arrival in New Zealand, exotic species soon outnumbered indigenous ones. Wetlands were drained, bush and tussock land was cleared. But contemporarily, the reality is more complex than native = good; exotic = bad. Many of our introduced flora have provided new habitats for native birds; pine and eucalypt forests are useful for capturing carbon and acting as nursey trees for native seedlings; and much of New Zealand’s agricultural economy is based on exotic flora. The categorisation of plants into ‘invasive’ or ‘weed’ is complicated, a question that is considered by other artists in this exhibition.
Image Credit: Melissa Macleod, New Days (168/365) (installation view), 2023. Dried gazania new days, European beech, Perspex.
In the Community Lounge, New Days (168/365) by New Brighton artist Melissa Mcleod focusses on a little-known coastal daisy. The Gazania is a plant familiar to local coastal locations such as New Brighton and Birdlings Flat. It is grown purposefully in gardens and on verges in these coastal communities while at the same time being defined as a noxious weed. As a result it is often victim to large-scale eradication attempts. Upstairs, ?tautahi artist Zina Swanson draws attention to another exotic species often described as a difficult to control 'bindweed'. Zina uses the traditional documentation and display methods of botanists to highlight the physical characteristics of the plants and their flowers, elevating their status within this new context.
Image Credit: Zina Swanson, Convolvulus Diaries (installation view), 2023. Watercolour and pressed convolvulus on paper, glass, powder-coated steel temporary fence, painted butter paper and florists wire.
Image Credit: Conor Clark, As far as the eye can reach (installation view), 2023. Digital C-type prints with braille (UV ink, PVC) and audio (via QR code/Soundcloud).
Ng?i Tahu photographic artist Conor Clarke considers domestic relationships with plants in her collaborations with members of Selwyn's Blind and low vision community. Descriptions from her collaborators inform a photographic image made by Conor, which are then printed with braille and accompanied with audio versions of their original descriptions.
Image Credit: Te K?hui Hono (Christine Brown, Thomas Parata, Patty Anne Oberst, Tania Nutira, Linda Rangipunga, Ngaio Tuari, Toni Rowe), He Taonga Mutunga Kore (installation view), 2023. Harakeke, wire.
Herbarium invites audiences to think critically about the plant life they engage with on a daily basis, and the impact that our botanical collection histories, language, and growing environmental awareness has on what we value.





