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Friday 24 June 2016

Want to see a painting done by a international artist and pupils from Tautoro school?

Heaven
  • The water to me represents the movement of life and all the challenges we will face.
  • The outline of the sea represents my maunga tautoro me tauanii
  • What I want for other people to see what the sky is about the limit like birds can fly anywhere they want and it also guides you.
  • The color red and black and white represents the culture of maori and in the olden days they painted so when they paint that is when they protect the wood.
  • The red also protects the wood that we painted on.
  • When they row the waka all together they get currents in the water and those currents are the things we face in life.
Amira
  • Today eight students and whaea theresa painted a mural.
  • The water makes you feel like what you are going through in life.
  • The Sky goes around whole world.
  • The silver represents your maunga. webcam-toy-photo22.jpg
Letisha
  • The painting that we have drew today represents the 12 waka values that we use here today at Tautoro School
  • The sky represents the whole world
  • The Kowhaiwhai represents the water.
  • The Ridgeline Represents the maunga that is behind Tautoro School
The red is important because it was made from earth.
Anthony

tumanako
The sky represents the whole world to feel free to do anything in life.
The spirals in the water represents the challenges that you will face in life.
The 12 waka hoe represent our school values. We made sure that all the hoe were facing the same way so that everyone rows in the same direction and so that we get past things together.
The colour red is one of the important colours on our painting because it protects the wood and because it is the natural maori colours the we use today.
Anthony

AJ
Today we painted a plank that mean our 12 waka hoe.
  1. The blue mean the water and the sky.
  2. webcam-toy-photo22.jpg
Sonny


1 comment:

  1. Love the purakau behind the painting, awesome mahi! Can't wait to see it hanging up proudly in Tautoro School!!!!! Tino Pai ou mahi tamariki ma!!!!

    ReplyDelete

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