artnet.com
Search the whole artnet database
 
 
  Services  | The Grove Dictionary of Art

  Research Library groveart.com Artist Biographies
Materials and Techniques
Styles and Movements
 
 

Karaka, Emily

(b Auckland, NZ, 1952). Maori painter. Her tribal affiliation is Ngai Tai, Waishu, Ngati Hine, Ngati Wai. Largely self-taught, she acknowledged the encouragement of such artists as Arnold Manaaki Wilson, Colin McCahon and Ralph Hotere. She exhibited regularly after her first one-woman show at the Outreach Gallery in Auckland in 1980. Her work, which shows a highly personal and expressive style, is often political and drawn from both Maori and European art traditions. Many of the figures in her painting recall carvings from the whare whakairo (Maori meeting houses). She used bright colours, often applied with fast expressionistic strokes, and texts (predominantly Maori) to address viewers to the political and cultural issues affecting society. She wished to ‘bring into the chamber-vaults of reflection, the mirrored stories of the cost, changes, growth, life and death of our society’. She was one of the women artists who brought a new force to the Maori art movement in the 1980s.

There are more than 45,000 articles in The Grove Dictionary of Art. To access the rest of this article, including the bibliography, subscribe to www.groveart.com. To find out more about this subject, click on a related article below and subscribe to www.groveart.com

  Reproduced by kind permission of Macmillan Publishers Limited, publishers of The Grove Dictionary of Art.
  © Copyright 2000 Macmillan Publishers Limited.
site map  about us  contact us  investor relations  services  terms & conditions artnet.com | artnet.de | artnet.fr
   ©2009 artnet - The art world online. All rights reserved. artnet is a registered trademark of artnet Worldwide Corporation, New York, NY.  


search artists: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z