Onepū

Onepū is a dance work choreographed by Louise Pōtiki Bryant for Atamira Dance Company

Onepū was made in collaboration with Ariana Tikao, the dancers and the creative team. The work is an expression of mana wāhine; the intrinsic spiritual power of women, and is inspired by a Kāi Tahu tradition as told by Teone Taare Tikao about six atua wahine (female deities) who control and release the principal winds of the world.

Teone Taare Tikao was born in 1850. As a boy he was sent by his father to study under two tohunga in Banks Peninsula, with whom he stayed for nearly ten years. In 1920 he was interviewed by historian Herries Beattie and a book was subsequently published in 1939. The book is Tikao Talks - Traditions and Tales of the Canterbury Maori as told by Teone Taare Tikao to Herries Beattie. In the book Tikao acknowledges six atua wahine who stand at different points on a sand bank named Pikopiko-i-whiti which encircles the world. Standing within the directions of the wind these atua are strong forces of nature with the enormous power of controlling and releasing the winds of the world.

Onepū is a meditation on the different qualities brought to us on the winds of each of these atua wahine:

Hine-aroaro-pari (Ariana Tikao) controls the pari-kalakalaka (pari-kārangaranga), the echoes on either inland or sea cliffs.

Hine-rōriki (Rosie Tapsell) holds and releases the powerful northerly winds.

Hine-pū-nui-o-toka (Louise Pōtiki Brayant) holds Te pū o te hau, the power of the wind in general, however her position is in the South West where she holds Te pū o te toka - the origin of the southerly winds. She is the mother of the other five wāhine, and is Māui’s grandmother.

Hine-aroraki (Jess Johns / Jasmin Canuel) whose name denotes soaring, controls the flight of birds. She is the oldest of the five daughters and is Māui’s mother.

Hine-rōtia (Presley Ziogas) holds and releases the westerly winds, one of which – the māuru – was known to bring tidings of those who have passed on.

Hine-hauone (Imogen Tapara) controls the easterly to northern winds. She finds Maui wrapped in a cloth after he had been placed out to sea by his mother Hine-aroraki who thought he was a whānau-karukaru (miscarriage). Hine-hauone nurses Māui to life.

Music Composition - Paddy Free and Ariana Tikao

Vocalist / Taonga Pūoro - Ariana Tikao

Costume Design - Rona Ngahuia Osborne

Lighting Design - Vanda Karolczak

Video Design - Louise Pōtiki Bryant