Ans Westra At Crane Brothers
This Evening we had an event in our Wellington store in association with {Suite} Gallery to present an exhibition of prints from Ans Westra's celebrated 1963 series Washday at the Pa. The works will be on display this month in the store.
Forty-seven years ago Westra provided the text and forty-four images for a Department of Education journal made for primary schools. Titled Washday at the Pa the book followed a day in the life of a rural Maori family of eight children awaiting relocation to a state house in the city.
Following protests by the Maori Women Welfare League Washday at the Pa was controversially withdrawn from circulation by the Department of Education. The League condemned Westra's depiction of the poor, rural Maori family living in sub-standard housing as untruthful and inaccurate.
Westra defended the integrity of the images and as copyright owner later in 1964 published the second edition through the Caxton Press. Westra took this opportunity to add twenty-two new images, some introducing whole new episodes to the story.
This exhibition supports the publication of the third edition of Washday at the Pa, which features images made for the 1964 first and second editions of the book as well as images made by Westra in 1998 as part of a subsequent project: Washday at the Pa Revisited. Accompanying Westra's images is text by Mark Amery.
Copies of the new edition of Washday at the Pa are available in store.

View more Dispatch posts
Back to DispatchAncestral Patterns
Webb’s has a rare Feltex Rug in their latest auction. In 1972, artist Don Ramage designed a striking wool rug, commissioned by the New Zealand Wool Board and produced by...
No Smoke Without Fire
NZ Herald: Hotel fire smokes out new men’s boutique This week marks twenty-five years since a fire in the basement of Hotel De Brett nearly destroyed Crane Brothers before it...
Joe Caroff
Joe Caroff, the designer behind some of cinema’s most enduring images, has died in New York aged 103. In 1962 he turned the curve of a “7” into the barrel...