Difference between revisions of "Kitsch"
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<td width="25%">[[Image:Lamp.jpg |thumb|left|A rock art image often interpreted as an eagle used on a lamp base.]]</td> | <td width="25%">[[Image:Lamp.jpg |thumb|left|A rock art image often interpreted as an eagle used on a lamp base.]]</td> | ||
<td width="25%">[[Image:Ewart.jpg |thumb|left|Dorothy Ewart pottery dish.]]</td> | <td width="25%">[[Image:Ewart.jpg |thumb|left|Dorothy Ewart pottery dish.]]</td> | ||
− | <td width="25%"> | + | <td width="25%">[[Image:Stampdish.jpg |thumb|left|The stamp on a Crown Lynn dish - ultimate Kiwiana?.]]</td> |
<td width="25%"> </td> | <td width="25%"> </td> | ||
</tr> | </tr> |
Revision as of 03:09, 30 April 2011
Archaeological Kitsch
Archaeological items of iconic status become the subject of modern copies and re-use of the imagery. New Zealand items are not immune.
Maori Rock Art
Rock drawings seem to have been particularly prone to this - borrowings appearing on fabrics, glassware, ceramics, postage stamps and even matchboxes. O'Regan discusses this use in the context of cultural property[1].
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Maori Other
Colonial
Barry Curtis Park in South Auckland has volcanic rock walls, reconstructed from a nearby farm site. The unfortunate result is what happens when landscape architecture captures archaeological reconstruction.
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References
- ↑ O'Regan, G. 2008 The shifting place of Ngai Tahu rock art. in Sue O'Connor, Geoffrey Clark, Foss Leach (Eds), Islands of inquiry : colonisation, seafaring and the archaeology of maritime landscapes. Terra Australis 29 Accessed at http://epress.anu.edu.au/terra_australis/ta29/pdf/ch26.pdf