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Icon Award
Arnold Manaaki Wilson
Arnold Manaaki Wilson
Ngāi Tuhoe & Te Arawa | MNZM
Sculptor
  • Arnold Manaaki Wilson
  • Biography
News
  • Arnold Manaaki WIlson receives MNZM
Related links Arnold Wilson receives his MNZM from the Governor-General
Milestones
  • 1928   
    Born  Ruatoki, North Island, New Zealand
  • 1955   
    Graduated, University of Auckland's Elam School of Fine Arts.
  • 1958   
    Art teacher Bay of Islands College, Kawakawa
  • 1968   
    Recent New Zealand Sculpture
    , Auckland City Art Gallery
  • 1976   
    South Pacific Festival of Arts, Rotorua
  • 1978   
    Ten
    Māori Artists Manawatu Art Gallery, Palmerston North
  • 1986   
    Haongia te Taonga
    , Waikato Art Museum in Hamilton
  • 1990   
    Kohia Ko Taikaka Anake
    , National Art Gallery, Wellington
  • 1992  
    United States tour of Te Waka Toi: Contemporary Māori Art from New Zealand
  • 2001   
    Nga Tohu a Ta Kingi Ihaka/Sir King Ihaka Award from Te Waka Toi
  • 2007   
    Arts Foundation of New Zealand Icon Award
  • 2008   
    Honorary doctorate from AUT University, Auckland
  • 2010   
    Member of the said Order (MNZM): for services to Māori and the arts

Biography

Arnold Manaaki Wilson - Sculptor
Ngāi Tuhoe & Te Arawa | MNZM

"One must play on the theme that a piece of wood is not dead, but alive, to be exploited."

Arnold Manaaki Wilson was born in 1928 in the North Island in the isolated Bay of Plenty township Ruatoki. Arnold won a scholarship to attend Wesley College in Paerata and went on to study art at the University of Auckland's Elam School of Fine Arts. Graduating in 1955, Arnold was the first Māori to gain a Diploma in Fine Arts, with first class honours in sculpture.

Arnold went to Teachers Training College and there followed a successful and long career in art education, leading a cultural revival of Māori art in schools and in the community. Along with other contemporary artists such as Ralph Hotere, Marilyn Webb and Sandy Adsett, he questioned the orthodoxies and practices of both Māori and Pākehā art traditions. Arnold does not work from a single cultural base. With Māori and Scottish ancestry, he draws upon his bicultural background to produce his work. As a sculptor he has experimented with many traditional and non-traditional materials, working with metal, vivid paint and wood in various forms. He has been one of the most important mentors of a Modernist Māori art movement within New Zealand.

Arnold has exhibited extensively in New Zealand and overseas including Recent New Zealand Sculpture (1968) at the Auckland City Art Gallery, the South Pacific Festival of Arts (1976) in Rotorua, Ten Māori Artists (1978) Manawatu Art Gallery in Palmerston North, Haongia te Taonga (1986) Waikato Art Museum in Hamilton, Kohia Ko Taikaka Anake (1990) National Art Gallery in Wellington and the United States tour of Te Waka Toi: Contemporary Māori Art from New Zealand (1992).

Arnold received a Nga Tohu a Ta Kingi Ihaka/Sir King Ihaka Award from Te Waka Toi in 2001 for new directions in contemporary Maori art.

Since his retirement from the position of Director of the Cross-Cultural Community Involvement Art Programme in the Department of Education, he has continued his educational role as kaumātua and advisor to a number of public art programmes. He worked for many years to establish the Awataha urban marae complex in Auckland and is still there today as kaumātua working with young urban Māori.

Arnold received an Arts Foundation of New Zealand Icon Award in 2007.  He was awarded an honorary doctorate by AUT University, Auckland, acknowledging his work in education and the arts in 2008 and in he was made a  Member of the said Order (MNZM ): for services to Māori and the arts, as announced in the 2010 Queens Birthday honours list. .

Arnold Maanaki Wilson lives in Auckland.


"Arnold Manaaki Wilson has been a major presence on the contemporary Māori art scene for half a century. He was among the Māori art educators working in Northland who joined forces in 1958 to present (in Auckland) the first exhibition of contemporary art by Māori artists. The movement pioneered by those artists Ralph Hotere, Katerina Mataira, Muru Walters, Selwyn Wilson and Arnold Wilson has long since burgeoned into a thriving and distinctive enterprise, drawing in hundreds of gifted Māori artists, involving curators, writers, dealers and public and private collectors, and delighting untold numbers of viewers at home and abroad. As ambassador, advocate, agent provocateur, educator, and exemplar, Arnold Wilson has played a pivotal role in the positioning of such art in national and international forums."

Jonathan Mane-Wheoki, Director Art and Collection Services, Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and Arts Foundation Governor

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