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Kete whakairo (patterned bag) named 'Tatai Whetu ki te Rangi'

Object | Part of Taonga Māori collection

item details

NameKete whakairo (patterned bag) named 'Tatai Whetu ki te Rangi'
ProductionSonia Snowden; weaver; 2011; Ōtaki
Classificationkete
Materialskiekie (fibre), muka (fibre), dye
Materials Summarykiekie, muka, harakeke, synthetic dyes
Techniquesraranga
DimensionsOverall: 285mm (width), 165mm (height)
Registration NumberME024141
Credit linePurchased 2014

Overview

This kete whakairo (patterned bag) named Tatai Whetu ki te Rangi was woven in 2011 by master weaver Sonia Snowden (Ngāti Whātua, Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Hine, Ngāti Wai).

Sonia remembers being inspired to weave this kete whakairo while looking out at the Tararua Ranges in the morning while Matariki was visible. This kete whakairo was woven to acknowledge the Māori New Year andspeaks to the early reclamation of knowledge surrounding Matariki by Māori

Construction
Tatai Whetu ki te Rangi is woven from black dyed and natural white boiled kiekie (Freycinetia Banksii) using traditional rāranga technique. Natural white muka (New Zealand flax fibre) has been braided and attached to form the handles of this kete whakairo.

Design 
While many weavers today credit the pattern woven in this kete whakairo as Sonia Snowden’s Matariki pattern, Sonia herself states that this pattern was directly inspired by woven works she seen while visiting the islands of Vanuatu on holiday.

"People call it my ‘Matariki’ pattern but it is not my pattern. I visited a weaving studio while I was in Vanuatu, and there around all these women were these beautiful star patterns. I asked them if it would be ok if I learned this from them would it be ok to weave into my own kete to which they agreed. For them it represented the night sky, but for me and our reclaiming of our new year it was Matariki".

Sonia Snowden, 2021