Original antique views and prints depicting Māori communities, culture and landscapes, offering a visual record of indigenous life in New Zealand.
![[A fortified town or village, called a hippah, built on a perforated rock at Tolaga sic in New Zealand]. Captain Cook [A fortified town or village, called a hippah, built on a perforated rock at Tolaga sic in New Zealand].](https://antiqueprintmaproom.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/nz_cook_18-270x217.jpg)
1773
![[A fortified town or village called a Hippah, built on a perforated rock at Tolaga, New Zealand]. Captain Cook [A fortified town or village called a Hippah, built on a perforated rock at Tolaga, New Zealand].](https://antiqueprintmaproom.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/077_web_a-270x218.jpg)
1773
![[A chest of New Zealand, as a specimen of the carving of the country.] Captain Cook [A chest of New Zealand, as a specimen of the carving of the country.]](https://antiqueprintmaproom.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/081_web_a-218x270.jpg)
1773
![[A view of a perforated rock in Tolaga Bay in New Zealand]. Captain Cook [A view of a perforated rock in Tolaga Bay in New Zealand].](https://antiqueprintmaproom.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/075_web_a-270x218.jpg)
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1847
This category features original antique views and prints that portray Māori people, culture and landscapes, providing a visual record of indigenous life in New Zealand during the early contact and colonial era. These works often derive from sketches made by explorers, missionaries and artists in the 19th century, then translated into engraved or lithographed prints for atlases, illustrated travel accounts and ethnographic works.
Subject matter may include village scenes, kāinga (settlements), ritual and ceremonial contexts, traditional waka (canoes), carvings and coastal or inland settings that reflect Māori social and environmental presence. While created from a range of perspectives, these prints offer documentary insight into how Māori communities and landscapes were perceived and represented in earlier periods.
Antique Māori views are valued for their cultural and historical importance, providing collectors, historians and cultural researchers with visual documentation of New Zealand’s indigenous heritage through the medium of early printmaking.
Exchange rates are only indicative. All orders will be processed in Australian dollars. The actual amount charged may vary depending on the exchange rate and conversion fees applied by your credit card issuer.
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