About this work
Fusing customary Māori design with industrial materials, Michael Parekōwhai transforms mass-produced light boxes into radiant sculptural forms. Wrapped in intricate kōwhaiwhai patterns, which traditionally adorn the rafters of a Māori wharenui (communal house), the works in this series invite reflection on ancestry, memory and identity. In Christian theology, the ‘bosom of Abraham’ describes a place of rest between life and the afterlife. For Parekōwhai, it also recalls his ancestor Aperahama Tutoko, as well as a song from his youth, the spiritual standard ‘Rock My Soul in the Bosom of Abraham’. These interwoven references reflect the artist’s ongoing interest in the ways cultural knowledge is carried, remixed and illuminated.