Pine Taiapa

Pineamine "Pine" Taiapa (19011972) was a notable New Zealand wood carver, farmer, rehabilitation officer, writer and genealogist.[1] He was one of the first students of the School of Māori Arts in Rotorua under Āpirana Ngata. As a carver he was part of over ninety-nine wharenui (Māori meeting houses) around Aotearoa New Zealand.

Pine Taiapa
Born1901
Died1972
NationalityNew Zealand
EducationTe Aute College, New Zealand Māori Arts and Crafts Institute
Known forMāori carving on wharenui

Biography

Taiapa was born in Tikitiki, East Coast, New Zealand in 1901, to Tamati Taiapa and Maraea Iritawa Taiapa (née Potae).[2] Of Māori descent, he identified with the Ngati Porou iwi. His secondary school education was at Te Aute College in Hawkes Bay.[3]

His earliest carving teacher was master-carver Hone Ngatoto who invited him to work alongside him on the Tikitiki War Memorial Church.[3] The building of this memorial St Mary's church in Tikitiki was instigated by Ngāti Porou leader Āpirana Ngata in the early 1920s and is regarded as 'one of the most beautiful Māori churches in New Zealand'.[4]

Taiapa went on to be one of the first students under Āpirana Ngata at the School of Māori Arts in Rotorua in 1927 which became the New Zealand Māori Arts and Crafts Institute. Between 1947 and 1940 Taiapa worked on over sixty wharenui (meeting houses).[3] Taiapa was then a soldier in World War II, part of the Māori Battalion. On his return he went back to carving and worked on a further thirty-nine wharenui.[3]

Personal life and death

He married Mereaira Te Ruawai Taiapa, by whom he had a child. His younger brother Hone Taiapa was also a carver.[5] He died in Tikitiki on the 9th of February 1972, age 70.

References

  1. "the heART of the matter" BWX Productions (Video 2016), Wellington, NZ. L & J Bieringa
  2. Geni Profile - https://www.geni.com/people/Pineamine-Taiapa/6000000077988628493
  3. Māori carving : the art of preserving Māori history. Huia Publishers. Wellington. 2015. ISBN 978-1-77550-191-6. OCLC 905937385.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
  4. "Tikitiki church war memorial". NZ History. 1 May 2020. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  5. Ballara, Angela. "Pineamine Taiapa". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 1 December 2011.


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