In the late 19th century, there was growing ethnographic interest in the origin of the
Māori population in New Zealand, with the dominant theory being advanced by
Stephenson Percy Smith, this being the existence of a '
Grand Fleet' of seven canoes that arrived in about 1350 from
Rarotonga, in the
Cook Islands. Smith argued that this Grand Fleet followed the supposed discovery of New Zealand by the Polynesian explorer
Kupe in about 750, and its rediscovery in the 9th century by
Toi and Whatonga; the latter allegedly found the country was inhabited by the
Moriori people, a primitive race of Polynesians, which were wiped out by those people of the Grand Fleet. However, many ethnographers of the time struggled with the notion that the Māori, an allegedly primitive race, possessed the necessary navigational skills to make a deliberate, planned voyage to New Zealand. Therefore, an alternative theory was that the Māori arrived purely by chance, due to being blown off course or becoming lost. The perception in New Zealand in the late 1800s was that the Māori population was dying out as a result of contact with superior western civilisation. The concept of the 'Grand Fleet', which resulted in the demise of the Moriori, tied into this view and in the settlers' minds justified the colonisation of New Zealand by Europeans and the decline of the Māori people. It was against this backdrop that
Sir George Grey, a former
Premier of New Zealand who had an interest in the culture of indigenous peoples, urged artists to record aspects of the Māori people with a view to preserving them for posterity. Two who did so were
Louis Steele and
Charles Goldie, who combined to produce
The Arrival of the Maoris in New Zealand in 1899. Louis Steele, was an English-born artist who had trained in
Paris. He emigrated to New Zealand in 1886 and established a studio at the Victoria Arcade in
Auckland's
Shortland Street. He executed historical paintings, including of events involving the Māori people. Charles Goldie, born in Auckland in 1870, showed prowess in art while still at school, winning awards from the
Auckland Society of Arts and the New Zealand Art Students' Association. After his education was completed, he studied art under the tutelage of Steele for a time. Then, from 1893 to 1898, Goldie studied art in France including a period at the
Académie Julian. During his time there, he made copies of paintings in the
Louvre. On his return to Auckland in 1898, he reconnected with Steele, and the two of them set up an art academy at Shortland Street. ==Description==