Summary

Studio portrait of a young Maori girl dressed in a kahu huruhuru (feather cloak), a style of kakahu (Maori cloak). Feather cloaks became popular in the latter half of the 19th century. During this period weavers experimented with new materials such as the feathers of non-indigenous species. For example, this cloak incorporates the feathers of the guineafowl (Numida meleagris), an introduced bird common in New Zealand.The photograph was taken by the New Zealand photographer Arthur James Iles, a professional photographer active during the late 19th and early 20th centuries and largely based in Rotorua. It is one of a series of twenty studio portraits of Maori taken by Iles in Museums Victoria's collections. The photographer's imprint forms part of the image and reads: 'ILES PHOTO ROTORUA No 58'. Iles photographed a range of subjects including people, landscapes, sites as well as the local flora and fauna. His specialisation, however, was portraiture, particularly of the Maori population. Throughout his career he relocated his studios many times, including Thames, Auckland and Rotorua in New Zealand and Sydney, Australia at the Falk Studios. In 1893, Iles had relocated to Thames, on the North Island of New Zealand and it was in this period and location that Iles really began to establish himself as a photographer of Maori people. He was able to attract Maori people to his studio with his association with Captain Gilbert Mair, a captain of Maori troops loyal to the colonial government, who facilitated visits by senior Maori men His marriage to Rebecca Elsie Utuatonga, a Maori woman in 1895, would have assisted Iles to encourage young Maori women to be photographed in his studio. Born in Oamaru in New Zealand's South Island in 1870, Iles would eventually, at just 21 years of age, establish his own photography studio in Central Otago in 1891. Iles' father was a photographer, and without doubt this early exposure to and association with photography, influenced his path. His marriage to Rebecca Elsie Utuatonga, with whom he had five children ended in divorce in 1932 and he subsequently married Ada Hunt. Iles died on 9 April 1943.

Physical Description

Albumen print. Studio portrait. Photographer's imprint bottom of print. No information on reverse.

More Information