Mark Adams: A survey He kohinga whakaahu
By (Author) Sarah Farrar
By (author) Mark Adams
Massey University Press
Massey University Press
3rd April 2025
New Zealand
General
Non Fiction
Hardback
360
Width 250mm, Height 290mm, Spine 35mm
2700g
Mark Adams is one of Aotearoa New Zealands foremost photographers. His focus on Samoan tatau, MoriPkeh interactions in Rotorua, carved meeting houses, locations of significance for Ngi Tahu in Te Waipounamu, and Captain James Cooks landing sites reflect his deep engagement with our postcolonial and Pacific histories.
This first-ever comprehensive survey of his work honours one of our most distinguished and continually compelling photographers. It includes photographs taken across the Pacific, the United Kingdom and Europe that explore the migration of artistic and cultural practices across the globe, and examine the role of museums, and photography itself, in this dynamic and ongoing cross-cultural exchange.
Dr Sarah Farrar is head of curatorial and learning at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tmaki. She is a curator and art historian whose research focuses on contemporary art, curatorial activism and the complexities of cross-cultural exchange. Her recent curatorial projects include the exhibition Taimoana | Coastlines: Art in Aotearoa, with Cameron Ah Loo-Matamua, Dr Jane Davidson-Ladd and Nathan Phio, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tmaki, 202426; and the retrospective exhibition Robin White: Te Whanaketanga | Something Is Happening Here, co-curated with Dr Nina Tonga, an Auckland Art Gallery nationally touring exhibition project with Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, 202223. Farrars publication Robin White: Something Is Happening Here, co-edited with Jill Trevelyan and Dr Nina Tonga, was a finalist in the 2023 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards.
Mark Adams was born in Linwood, tautahi Christchurch, Aotearoa New Zealand, in 1949. He studied at Ilam School of Fine Arts, University of Christchurch (graduating in 1970), where he taught himself large-format analogue photography. Since then, he has photographed all over the country focusing on the cultural convergences of postcolonial Aotearoa New Zealand, its landscapes and its people. He is notable for his groundbreaking work photographing Samoan tatau practices and revisiting sites of historical importance in Aotearoa New Zealand. Adams has been the recipient of several residencies and awards, including the Southland Art Foundation Artist in Residence in 1997; the Leverhulme Artist in Residence at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Cambridge, and the Marti Friedlander Photographic Award, both in 2009. His work has also been the subject of a number of publications, including Tatau: Samoan Tattoo, New Zealand Art, Global Culture, published by Te Papa Press in 2010 and reissued in a new edition in 2023. Adams lives and works in Oxford, Te Waipounamu, and Tmaki Makaurau Auckland.