I a ia e mahi ana hei ringa toi, hei kaitiaki toi, hei kairangahau, hei kaitiaki taiao r膩nei e whakapono ana a Ahorangi Huhana Smith he mahi t膩na ki t膿nei ao: ko te whakamahi i te kaha o te tangata me te toi kia tutuki ai ng膩 mahi.
I kopoua ia hei Upoko i te Whiti o Rehua - School of Art i te tau 2016 ki te, e ai ki a ia, 鈥渕ahi tahi ki 膿tahi t膩ngata ka whakatutuki i 膿tahi mahi rawe鈥, i tae tuatahi mai a Ahorangi Smith ki te whare w膩nanga hei tauira tawhiti i te tau 1994. I te tau 1995, ko ia t膿tahi o ng膩 tauira tuatahi ki te whai i te tohu toi - Bachelor of M膩ori Visual Arts (BMVA) ki Te Papa-i-oea 鈥 he rongo hokitanga ki te k膩inga m艒na, he tini ng膩 膩huatanga i p膿r膩 ai. He hokitanga ki te whenua i mahue mai i t艒na m膩m膩 m艒 Ahitereiria i te tau 1956, me te t奴taki ki te tirohanga M膩ori, ka m膩rama ia i noho muna i 膩na mahi toi me t艒na ng膩kau whiwhita:
"I mua i taku tae mai ki Aotearoa, i te waihanga mahi toi ahau i tipu i te m膩t膩pono M膩ori 鈥 膩, k膩ore ahau i paku m艒hio. Ko te BVMA i t墨ni i taku tirohanga, kia tirohanga M膩ori ai, i whakaatu mai me p膿hea te whakahoropaki, me te whakahuatau i te ahurea toi M膩ori, me t艒na takenga mai i te taiao. Ko te t奴rangawaewae ki te M膩ori he hononga tata ki te taiao m膩ori, 膩, ko ahau t膿r膩. He tangata taiao ahau 鈥 koir膩 te ngako o 膩ku mahi!"
I hoki mai a Ahorangi Smith ki tana t奴rangawaewae, ki Horowhenua-K膩piti, i te tau 1997, tata ki te tekau tau i muri i t膩na whakaoti i tana tohu. I te tau 2009, i wehe ia i tana t奴ranga hei Kaitiaki Toi M膩ori Matua i Te Papa ki te rangahau i ng膩 p膩nga kino ki te whenua. I konei i whakarite ia i t膿tahi huinga kaupapa hei whakakotahi i ng膩 m艒hiotanga o ng膩 p奴kenga me ng膩 t膩ngata whenua. Ko ng膩 kaupapa ka whakahaerehia e Ahorangi Smith i Te Kunenga ki P奴rehuroa ka kimi huarahi auaha ki te whakam艒hio ki te iwi ng膩 p膩nga kino o ng膩 mahi p膩mu arumoni ki te taiao. Ka whai w膩hi mai ko te tirotiro ara-wai m艒 ng膩 tukumate me ng膩 k墨rearea, ko te whakat奴 whakakitenga toi i ng膩 h膿ti p膩mu w膩tea, ko te h墨koi hoki ki te whenua.
"Kua whakaako mai ki a au me p膿hea te whakarite i taku oranga me aku mahi. Ko te whakawhanaungatanga me te mahi ng膩tahi 鈥 heoi ka m膩tua hoki ko te whai whakaaro ki ng膩 p奴kenga o te whenua, ko te m膩ramatanga h艒honu ki t膿tahi w膩hi. He nui rawa atu te m膩tauranga ka puta i te whenua 鈥 ko t膩ku he ako ki te whakakotahi me te tohu kia tutuki ai ng膩 mahi."
Ehara t膿nei mahi i te mahi peita me te waihanga pakoko r膩nei p膿nei i t膩 Ahorangi Smith e taunga ai, heoi ko te whai whakaaro ki t膿tahi p奴kenga toi motuhake, te pohewa i t膿tahi ao pai ake.
He w膩 t艒na i peita ahau m艒 ng膩 mea nei. Heoi i roa rawa t膿r膩! Te peita i t膿tahi terenga mahi toi me te k墨 atu ki 膿tahi i aku whakaaro. Me whai ringa toi t膩tau, ki te whakakotahi i 膿nei 膩huatanga matarau kia m膩rama ai. Ka 膩hei ng膩 ringa toi ki te whakaaro ki tua atu i te m膩ori noa 鈥 kia kitea ai he pito mata k膿 atu, 膩, he ara k膿 atu hei whakamau. Ko ng膩 t膩ngata whaihanga ka waihanga me te tiaki whakaaro. N艒 reira ka p膿hea te kukume i 膿r膩 whakaaro, kia whakakikokikotia ai?
Whether she鈥檚 working as an artist or curator, researcher or environmentalist, Professor Huhana Smith believes she鈥檚 got a job on the planet: to harness the power of people and art to get things done.
Appointed Head of Massey鈥檚 Whiti o Rehua School of Art in 2016 to, in her words, 鈥渨ork with a bunch of people to make cool stuff happen鈥, Professor Smith first came to the university as a distance student in 1994.
In 1995, she was in the first cohort of students to take the Bachelor of M膩ori Visual Arts (BMVA) programme in Palmerston North 鈥 which felt like a homecoming, in more than one sense. It was a return to a country her mother had left for Australia in 1956, and a meeting with a M膩ori worldview that, she came to see, had always been quietly present in her art and the passions that inspired it:
"Before I got to New Zealand, I was producing artworks that were all premised on a M膩ori philosophy 鈥 and I didn鈥檛 even know it. As the BVMA recalibrated our brains to an indigenous worldview, it allowed us to see how M膩ori visual culture could be contextualised and conceptualised, and how it came from our natural environment. T奴rangawaewae [鈥渁 place to stand鈥漖 for M膩ori is a close relationship with the natural environment, and that was me! I was very green, very environmentally-oriented 鈥 that was what my work was all about!"
Professor Smith returned to her t奴rangawaewae, Horowhenua-K膩piti, in 1997, over a decade after she first finished her first art degree. In 2009, she left her role as Senior Curator M膩ori at Te Papa to research environmental damage to the whenua. Here, she set up a group of projects to bring the expertise of scholars and professionals together with the deep local knowledge of tangata whenua.
The projects, which Professor Smith now runs from Massey, find imaginative ways to awaken people to the harm that commercial farming has caused to nature. They include everything from testing waterways for pathogens and pests, to staging exhibitions in disused dairy sheds, and taking h墨koi, or walking, talking hui, on the land.
"It鈥檚 really taught me how to run my life and my work. It鈥檚 about whakawhanaungatanga [building relationships] and working collectively 鈥 but just as importantly, acknowledging and using the pukengatanga [knowledge] of whenua, that deep understanding of place. There鈥檚 so much knowledge that just radiates out of the ground 鈥 and what I do is work out how to bring it all together and direct it into getting action done."
This work might not be painting or building sculpture installations, like Professor Smith used to, but it nonetheless relies on a special artistic ability 鈥 to imagine the world as if it were better.
"I used to do paintings about all of this stuff. But that was going to take me too long! To do a whole series of paintings and tell people what I was thinking. We need artists, though, to keep all this complexity together and understood. An artist has a capacity and a facility to think outside norms 鈥 to see that there are other kinds of potential and other ways of harnessing it.
As creative people we鈥檙e constantly creating, projecting ideas. So how do you pull down some of those ideas, to make them a tangible reality?"
Professor Huhana Smith
Ng膩ti Tukorehe, Ng膩ti Raukawa ki te Tonga
PhD, DipMusStud, BVMA
Head of School of Art, Whiti o Rehua School of Art, College of Creative Arts, Wellington