To celebrate Te Papa’s tenth anniversary, the Friends of Te Papa commissioned artist Humphrey Ikin to create a lectern for Rongomaraeroa, Te Papa’s contemporary meeting house on Level 4.
Humphrey Ikin is an artist working in wood already represented in Te Papa’s collection. ‘Red Stave Chair’ is currently on display in the Eyelights Gallery on Level 4.
The lectern represents a cloak of feathers of that vocal and resilient bird of the bush and city, the tui, and will be lit from within. Humphrey Ikin said this of the concept for the lectern.
‘[It] is conceptually a ‘cloak of confidence’, a Kahu mäia. To stand at this lectern, within its encasing cloak, is to stand and speak as one with all who have ‘worn the cloak’ previously, and will do so in the future.’
The lectern will be used during events and ceremonies on the Marae and throughout the museum.