|
Auckland Domain Sculpture Walk
Sculptures by some of New Zealands leading artists are installed in Auckland Domain as part of a permanent sculpture walk.
Auckland Domain hosts sculptural works by some of New Zealands leading artists. Stroll around the eight large works, each very different from the others, demonstrating the diversity in New Zealand art. Initiated by Sculpture 2001, the project sees scale models (known as maquettes) of the eight works displayed in the Auckland Museum.
The full-scale sculptures were installed in the Domain during 2004 and 2005.
The project is the first artist-initiated, artist-organized event in Auckland since the Sculpture Symposium of 1971 and the Stone Symposia of the 1980s, and is supported by Auckland City Council, the PA Edmiston Trust and the Lottery Grants Board.
The artists maquettes are located on the mezzanine floor overlooking the cenotaph. A self guided walking tour in the Domain taking in the sculptures is available on request from the Information Desk in the Museum foyer.
Click on the map for an enlarged view of the sculpture locations within the Domain. Download a pdf map here.
The Eight Artists
By Elizabeth Rankin, Professor of Art History at the University of Auckland
John Edgar | Chiara Corbelletto | Greer Twiss | Louise Purvis | Fred Graham | Christine Hellyar | Neil Miller | Charlotte Fisher |
|
Transformer 2004, John Edgar
Granite - Coromandel/India
John Edgar’s upright stele of grey granite is like an ancient stone memorial marking a sacred site. Does the work’s title Transformer refer to the role of the sculptor, carving form out of raw stone, or to the hand of time? The ovoid shape that lies near the vertical form suggests that a second monument has been toppled and worn away by the weather. This implied history through time is made more enigmatic by the narrow slices of red stone that have been laminated into the forms: looking like digital bar codes, they evoke cryptic messages in a secret language.
Special thanks to Trethewey Granite and Marble Ltd and Maunsell Limited for their support of this sculpture. |
|
Numbers are the Language of Nature 2005, Chiara Corbelletto
Bronze
Fluid, windswept triangles of cast bronze are fitted together in sexpartite groupings to create the complex planar surface of Chiara Corbelletto’s sculpture. The repeated modular elements remind us that all 0rganisms have an underlying geometry that is part of the universal laws of nature. And the curvilinear contours and surfaces of the shapes suggest the vibrancy of living forms. The work seems to share in the growing, changing character of nature and the rhythms of life, a quality enhanced by the flowing metal surface. |

|
|
 |
Graftings 2004, Greer Twiss
Bronze; 10 pieces
Ten small bronzes make up Greer Twiss’s work for the Domain. Nestled amidst the plants of the fernery, they represent nine indigenous birds and one introduced pear tree, perhaps the festive tree occupied by a partridge in the Christmas carol. They stand tall as though grafted onto metal supports like those that hold up young trees. The birds are readily recognisable by their characteristic silhouettes. They are also labelled with witty simulated tags, inscribed with the common, Latin and Maori name of each, as though they were specimens in a botanic garden or museum. |
|
Promise Boat 2005, Louise Purvis
Bardiglio marble and basalt
Louise Purvis has carved her sculpture in pale grey Bardiglio marble from Italy, fine grained and long lasting.Promise Boat is an archetypal vessel, tipped on its side to creates visual interest, perhaps also implying the beached craft of immigrants who arrived on the shores of Aotearoa New Zealand. The form is intriguingly bound in a continuous organic ribbon. This wrapping makes the mage mysterious, suggesting that it is a fragile form that has to be protected and bandaged, or that something is being hidden – perhaps evoking the personal stories of voyagers. |
 |
|
 |
Kaitiaki 2004, Fred Graham
Steel plate
This sculpture belongs to the tradition of abstract Modernist constructions which invite spectators to engage with the aesthetics of sculpture in its own right – its form, material, weight and scale. But of course it also represents a hawk. Fred Graham observes that birds were the original Tangata Whenua of Aotearoa, and the hawk has figured prominently in the oral traditions of Ngati Whatua and Tainui. The enormous swooping steel bird, dark against the sky, may seem threatening, but conveys the strength that makes the hawk a powerful guardian of the land.
Special thanks to Rex Erikson |
|
Spring 2004, Christine Hellyar
Bronze and basalt
Made of basalt which recalls the volcanic origins of the Domain, Christine Hellyar’s work is a stepped form of three flat-topped rocks. Although water is not a permanent part of the sculpture, the rocks’ surfaces are marked by grooves and a shallow pool which catch rain and suggest a directional flow of water. At both ends are two bronze fern fronds, small at the top, tall at the end of the flow path, reminding us of the key role of water in the growth of living forms. The work follows the line of Auckland’s first public water supply of 1866, which it commemorates. |
 |
|
 |
Regeneration 2005, Neil Miller
Steel and native plants
Neil Miller’s sculpture celebrates contemporary industrial materials in its soaring open tripod built of steel extrusions, welded and bolted together. But it will also celebrate indigenous plant life in unexpected combination with the manufactured character of the structure. The sculpture is intended to form a support for vines, which will be planted in its concrete base and grow over the frame to form a lush arbour. Flowering in the different seasons of spring, summer and autumn, they will suggest the constant renewal of life, reflected in the title Regeneration.
|
|
Arc 2004, Charlotte Fisher
Granite and bronze
Balanced on a high columnar base of stone is a wide bronze arc, an organic shape supporting seven vertical forms. Charlotte Fisher recounts how the image for her sculpture was drawn from an ancient European petroglyph which has long intrigued her. It probably depicted upright figures in a boat, and it seems an appropriate symbol for the many voyages of discovery and settlement that led to the founding and growth of Aotearoa New Zealand. The work’s elevated, somewhat precarious composition invokes the heroism yet vulnerability of those historic travellers.
|

|
|
|

The Auckland Domain |
|
The Museum is located in the city’s oldest and most popular park, the Auckland Domain. This expansive area is a respite from the rush and bustle of the city, just minutes away. From playing fields to formal gardens and ponds edged by century-old trees, there is much to see and do here. Features for visitors include the Winter Garden, Fernz Fernery and duck ponds. The pefect setting for family picnics and gatherings after your Museum visit.
Within an easy walk is Parnell, Auckland’s oldest suburb. Distinctive historic buildings combine with retail and vibrant cafes making Parnell Village a popular tourist attraction.
The Domain also connects Auckland Museum with Grafton, another part of the city with heritage status as a graceful remnant of old Auckland. Upmarket Newmarket, only a short walk from the Museum features fashion retail at its best as well as movie theatres, a public swimming and fitness centre and loads of great places to eat. |
|