Skip to content
Te Papa’s Blog
Museum of New ZealandTe Papa Tongarewa

  • VISIT
    Toro mai
    • Plan your visit
      Whakaritea tō toronga
    • Exhibitions
      Ngā Whakaaturanga
    • Events
      Ngā kaupapa motuhake
    • Guided tours
      He haerenga ārahi
    • Venues
      Wahi
  • DISCOVER THE
    COLLECTIONS

    Tūhuratia ngā kohinga
    • Collections online
      Kohinga Ipurangi
    • Blog
    • Read, watch, play
      Kōrero, mātaki, purei
  • LEARN
    Ako
    • Kids and families
      Mā te whānau
    • For educators
      Mā te pouako
    • For museums and galleries
      Mō ngā muhiama me ngā whare toi
    • Research
      Rangahau
    • Guides to caring for objects
      Tiaki Kohinga, Tiaki Taonga

  • ABOUT
    Mo matou
    • Contact us
      Whakapā mai
    • News
      He pānui
    • What we do
      Ā mātou mahi
    • The collections
      Ngā kohinga taonga
    • Repatriation
      Karanga Aotearoa
    • Touring exhibitions
      Ngā whakaaturanga poi haere
    • Past exhibitions
      Ngā whakaaturanga o mua
    • Jobs
      Tūranga mahi
    • Te Papa Press
    • Press and Media
      Papāho
    • Media sales and licensing
      Te hohoko papāho me te manatā
    • Our building
      Tō mātou whare
  • SHOP
    Wharehoko
  • SUPPORT & JOIN
    Tautokotia, kuhu mai
    • Friends of Te Papa – Our membership programme
      Ngā Hoa o Te Papa – Te hōtaka mema
    • Te Papa Foundation
    • Corporate partnerships
      Hononga kaipakihi
    • Corporate memberships

     

Te Papa Blog

Discover stories from Te Papa’s experts, including curators, scientists, historians, collection managers, and educators.

 

Blog home

museology

Eight people pose for a photo

Decolonise or indigenise: moving towards sovereign spaces and the Māorification of New Zealand museology

Sustainable indigenised practice in colonial museum models – is there such a thing? Kaihāpai Mātauranga Māori | Head of Mātauranga Māori Puawai Cairns explores the question.Read more

2020-02-10
By: Puawai Cairns
On: 10 Feb 2020
In: Māori

Opinion: why we should beware of the word ‘traditional’

In 1994, four years before the opening of Te Papa, Samoan novelist and scholar Albert Wendt was an advisor for the planned Pacific exhibitions. He requested that we abandon the use of terms like ‘traditional art’ in our labels and display signage. ‘Traditional means nothing to me!’ he said. AtRead more

2016-12-20
By: Sean Mallon
On: 20 Dec 2016
In: Art, Pacific

Blog alerts





Categories

Contact us   |   Media enquiries   |   Copyright and terms of use   |   Privacy   |   Te Papa Press login
shielded

© Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa 2023