InMotion – Matariki
InMotion Matariki is a big colourful parade in celebration of Matariki: the Māori New Year. Each winter participants decorate their bicycles and wheelchairs, and enjoy pockets of performance as they roll through Auckland’s Wynyard Quarter.
Māpura Studios Artists were projected onto big screens at the Silo during InMotion Matariki parade, and artworks were on display along the route.
The parade is created and presented by Touch Compass, New Zealand’s leading inclusive professional performing arts organisation combining artists with and without a disability.
Saturday July 6, 2019
Silo Park
Wynyard Quarter, Auckland
Matariki by Shyroe Henry compiled by Tim Danko
Music by Māpura Music edited by Stefan Neville
Inmotion videography by Tim Danko
Matariki Projection compiled by Tim Danko
Featuring work by:
Sarah Holton
Craig Murray
Shyroe Henry
Ela Tukuhaukava
Michael Nathan
Ululau Ama
Image: Untitled by Michael Nathan
Matariki: The Māori New Year
Traditionally, Matariki is the period of time referred to by Māori, to mark the changing of the year. It is a time to reflect upon the previous year and plan for the next. The common Māori translation of Matariki is “eyes of the god”.
According to myth, when Ranginui, the sky father, and Papatūānuku, the earth mother, were separated by their children, the god of the winds, Tāwhirimātea, became so angry that he tore out his eyes and threw them into the heavens.
Since this time, every year at a time around mid-winter, a cluster of stars called Matariki rises to mark the new year.
However, the name Matariki is not only used to describe the entire cluster of stars, but a specific single star within the group. The total number of stars in the cluster varies too. Some Māori talk of Matariki and her six children, and others talk of eight children. Regardless, each star is connected to the Māori world in its own special way.