Kitsch

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Archaeological Kitsch

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Archaeological items of iconic status become the subject of modern copies and re-use of the imagery. New Zealand items are not immune.

Rock drawings seem to have been particularly prone to this - borrowings appearing on fabrics, glassware and stamps.

A scarf with many images from rock art.
In the 1960s peanut butter was sold in packaging like these - which could be used as glases after they were emptied.
Someone's idea of a nephrite adze - for sale as a replica on TradeMe
Enamelled dishes, central one labelled by CERAWARE.
Rock art used on a commemorative stamp
Rock art used on a definitive stamp
Rock art used on fabric. This was produced by blockprinting by poet Rex Fairburn. He obtained the artwork for this from Theo Schoon
. Wikipedia has an article on Schoon.

Another print can be seen here Fairburn and Schoon have Dictionary of New Zealand Biography entries.

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[[Image:Curtis3.jpg|framed|left|]] [[Image:Curtis1.jpg|thumb|The sign]] [[Image:Curtis2.jpg|thumb|Walls]] [[Image:Curtis4.jpg|thumb|Yet more walls]]