Textile work Maeva-Taripo learned the craft from her aunt and grandmother and made her first
tivaevae at age sixteen. and the United States, and are held in the collections of several Cook Island institutions. Her work is often depicted in academic writings about the medium.:71 In 2001, Maeva-Taripo sold one of her tivaevae, which had won the highest honours at the National Council of Women's annual conference the previous year, to the Rarotongan Beach Resort and Spa for $10,000 (in New Zealand dollars), which was an unprecedented sum to be paid to a quilter. She positioned tivaevae as central to her identity as a woman from the Cook Islands, with the communal labor serving as a place for socializing, networking, and expression.
Tivaevae (2015) in
Queensland Art Gallery. Her tivaevae are in the collection of
Oceanside Museum of Art in United States,
Christchurch Art Gallery, in New Zealand, and a dress, or mu'umu'u, she made, is in the collection of the
British Museum.
Music Maeva-Taripo composed her first song at age nineteen. The majority of her songs are about legends or Cook Island culture. She was also a singer and competed in national contests. She wrote and recorded songs, some of which are preserved in the New Zealand National Library. Some of her songs were recorded by other artists as well. In 2010, Maeva-Taripo served as the leader of the Cook Islands Music Association, which was part of
UNESCO meetings on
intangible cultural heritage.
Discography • Vereara Maeva and The D.O.G. Band,
Korero; Araura taku ipukarea (Arorangi, Rarotonga: Teura Music Productions, 1997) == References ==