Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, in Wellington, museum of art, science, and the natural history of New Zealand, created in 1992 when the National Art Gallery and the National Museum merged under a parliamentary act. The name Te Papa Tongarewa translates to “our container of treasured things and people that spring from mother earth here in New Zealand” in Māori.
The collection began in 1865 when the museum was known as the Colonial Museum. It was renamed the Dominion Museum in 1907, and in 1936 it was relocated to a new building. It shared the space with the newly established National Art Gallery, which had incorporated the New Zealand Academy of Fine Arts. In 1972 the Dominion Museum became the National Museum. Twenty years later the parliamentary act merged the two institutions into one entity and gave the present museum its name. A building for the new museum opened in 1998.
The Te Papa in the 21st century comprises five major collections, focusing on art, history, Māori taonga (cultural treasures), Pacific cultures, and natural history. The art collection specializes in New Zealand and international painting, sculpture, prints, watercolours, drawings, and photographs; the history division focuses on New Zealand’s cultural heritage but also includes items from Asia, Australia, Africa, and the Americas, notably relics of James Cook; the Māori taonga section contains taonga, including artifacts and carvings; the Pacific cultures unit comprises historical and contemporary objects from the Pacific Islands; and the natural history collection houses plant and animal specimens.