Moon, Paul2026-01-062026-01-062025-12-19Journal of New Zealand Studies, ISSN: 1176-306X (Print), 40(2), 66-87. doi: 10.26686/jnzs.iNS40.104431176-306Xhttp://hdl.handle.net/10292/20444John B. Turner (b. 1943) is one of New Zealand’s preeminent documentary and art photographers. This article explores a particular collection of images of the west Auckland suburb of Te Atatū Peninsula, which Turner took over a period of seven years (2005-2011), and which were published in the book Te Atatu Me: Photographs of an Urban New Zealand Village (2015). The focus here is on how such photography can contribute to the historical archive as visual evidence through the intersection that it is able to achieve between documenting scenes in the form of photographs, and using the aesthetic dimensions of the medium both to project forms of meaning onto those images and as a device of cultural preservation.The Journal of New Zealand Studies is an open access journal and does not charge article processing charges (APCs) or submission charges. Authors may deposit article papers into their institutional repository.3601 Art history, theory and criticism4303 Historical studiesTe Atatu Me: A RetrospectiveJournal ArticleOpenAccess10.26686/jnzs.iNS40.10443