Godwit/Kuaka - Ralph Hotere
In 1977 Auckland International Airport commissioned Ralph Hotere to create a mural in response to the theme of long-distance air travel and arrival. In doing so, it commissioned one of the largest public paintings ever produced in New Zealand - 18m in length. Originally titled The Flight of the Godwit, it served as a welcome to returning citizens and a greeting to visitors at New Zealand's major entry point.
The enormous artwork remained in this traveller's welcoming area until 1996, when the airport undertook a redevelopment of the terminal building. The mural was deaccessioned from the airport's art collection, and subsequently purchased by the Chartwell Trust and placed at Auckland Art Gallery. At that moment, the artist renamed his mural Godwit/Kuaka.
Godwit/Kuaka weaves together many of the themes which Hotere's work at the time was exploring: the relationship between the ancient Maori worldview and the contemporary world; abstract art's ability to evoke ecology and cosmology; the relationship between place and human experience.
While Hotere's mural honours and recalls the flights undertaken by the migratory eastern bar-tailed godwit (Limosa lapponica baueri), it sets up a metaphor in which the bird's annual return represents our own travels and homecomings. This legendary shore bird is renowned for undertaking transoceanic journeys. Its stamina is legendary - not only is its journey a long one, but the godwit makes no stops for rest or sustenance along the way. Maori have long admired the bar-tailed godwit; they named it the kaka. The kaka's arrival is celebrated in the ancient Te Aupuri Maori chant which the artist's father, Tangirau Hotere, taught him at Mitimiti in Northland. Walking the length of Godwit/Kuaka's polished, reflective surface, viewers meet the darkened central panels on which Hotere has recorded in capital letters lines from the Te Aupuri chant. It is as if a bird's flight has come to rest with a song. The dark centre is flanked by vertical bands of colour which pulsate slowly, advancing forwards and retreating backwards upon the shiny lacquer-like surface. This bandwidth of shimmering and piercing hues acts as a melody of departure and arrival.
Godwit/Kuaka's astonishing presence is not solely driven by its physical scale, but by the emotion, the welcome that it creates. Looking like a fragment from a monumental loom in which the carefully drawn stripes are never-ending warps binding the darkness of night to the colour of day, the mural sings to us and acts as a beacon calling us home, signalling our safe arrival.
Ruia ruia, opea opea, tahia tahia
Kia hemo ake
Ko te kaka koakoa
Kia herea mai
Te kawai koroki
Kia tatata mai
I roto i tana pukorokoro whaikaro
He kuaka
He kuaka marangaranga
Kotahi manu
I tau ki te tahuna
Tau atu
Tau atu
Kua tau mai
Scattering, gathering, forming a single unit
Death/exhaustion rises up
It is the rope, koakoa [the cry of the bird]
Binding you here to me
The cry/chattering of the flock
Come close together
From inside its throat - a marauding party
A godwit
A godwit that hovers
One bird
Has settled on the sand bank
It has settled over there
It has settled over there
They have settled here
* The Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki gratefully acknowledges the close assistance provided by the late Ralph Hotere, Mary McFarlane and Judith Ablett-Kerr, chair, Ralph Hotere Foundation Trust in the preparation of this text about Godwit/Kuaka. The permission for reproduction of Godwit/Kaka is courtesy of Ralph Hotere. I appreciate the support of the Chartwell Trust, Ron Sang, and the family of the late Te Whanaupani Thompson (Ngapuhi, Ngati Wai) for permission to reprint his translation of the Muriwhenua chant Ruia ruia, opea opea, tahia tahia into English.
* Ron Brownson is senior curator, New Zealand and Pacific Art, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki.