CRAFT IN NEW ZEALAND New Zealand is an ancient land. It rose from the South Pacific ocean some one hundred and twenty million years ago and for unimaginable ages, at the dictates of earth forces, sank into the surrounding seas and rose again to become land. The age of reptiles ended and the ice ages were a moment in their passing, but whereas other lands developed a fauna of flesh eating animals, this land until the advent of man, a mere one thousand years ago, was host only to birds and fish, one harmless lingering relic of the dinosaurs, the Tuatara, two tiny species of bats and a host of small winged and crawling creatures. There were no humans, no carnivores, no snakes; just huge sombre forests, echoing hollowly with the songs of birds, open plains, towering mountains, lakes and rivers. Today, three million people live in New Zealand of whom about eight per cent are of predominantly Maori ancestry and about ninety per cent of British descent. There are small ethnic groups from almost every European country, the Islands of the Pacific, and Asia, most with still plainly recognisable cultural backgrounds and preserving to some extent their racial Identity. One out of every five people lives in rural areas occupied with farming and associated activities, the remainder live in towns and eitles. The first people this land saw were Polynesiens, the ancestors of the present Maori race, who began to arrive on these shores a thousand years or more ago, bringing with them their traditionel crafts or at least the knowledge and skills to reproduce them. These crafts immediately needed modification because of the new materials that confronted them. A plentifui supply of fibre from a hemp-like plant (Phormium tenax) was to prove ideal for cordage, nets, matting, baskets and clothing. Loom weaving had either been abandoned in their last homeland or had never been known to them and in place of this weaving they developed a finger twining technique in which the warp threads were hung from a cord suspended between two vertical sticks.and around each loose hung warp the weft thread was twined in single pairs and later in double pairs. Feathers of birds were sometimes inserted in each twining to make a warmer and more elaborate cloak. Until the arrival of the Europeans they were a Stone age people and found in New Zealand stone suitable for fashioning into cutting and carving tools, and also into weapons. A form of jade, nephrite, was also here, capable of taking a razor edge. From it were made a ränge of personal Ornaments such as the Tiki, the Pekapeka and other pendants, as well as a variety of adzes and chisels. The trees were large and plentifui and two of them, the KAURI and the TOTARA were ideal carving timbers. From them they fashioned huge dug out canoes sometimes 30 metres in length, with elaborately carved prows and stern pieces, and marvellously vital sculptures of ancestors and gods in deep bas relief. These carvings were also incorporated into buildings such as storehouses and meeting houses. Smaller pieces included clubs and spears, paddles, agricultural tools, boxes and bowls. Maori craft styles varied considerably throughout New Zealand, reflecting the traditions of their homelands, as well as the separate development of each more or less isolated tribe. This slow change common to crafts worldwide, was violently accelerated with the arrival of European culture in the early 19th Century, an acceleration which led to the eventual destruction of the great majority of the traditional arts and crafts. By the end of the 18th Century, European peoples were landing on the coasts and within forty years colonisation had begun in earnest. Inevitably the introduction of superior tools made from iron was welcomed by the Maori craftsman; the carefully sculpted form, sparingly decorated to enhance only, to point out and emphasise, perhaps dictated by the economy of the stone tool, was superseded by the hurriedly blocked out shape covered by an intricate and often meaningless veneer of carved design, spurred on by the facility of that new V-shaped Steel chisel. The real purpose and significance of most crafted Objects, cloaks, paddles, clubs, adzes, fish hooks and Ornaments vanished in a changed society, Only those with a continuing function, such as kitmaking, matting and carved meetinghouses, retained their vigour. Sometimes a new purpose was provided.