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Louise Purvis: Seismic
Dimensions:4 discs, 1.8m high x 1.8mm across x 0.6m deep
Sculptor:Louise Purvis
Location:Bunny St
Materials:Carrara marble
Date of installation: 20 December 2006

Seismic for Bunny Street

An outstanding new sculpture, Seismic, by the nationally renowned Auckland sculptor Louise Purvis is located at the western (Lambton Quay) end of Bunny St, in Victoria University of Wellington's Pipitea campus area.

Four large discs of fine Italian Carrara marble each 1.8 meters in diameter are strewn on the paving or on the raised grass areas as though thrown there by an earthquake. Each has carved patterns representing the different aspects of seismic activity. ''These strong, lyrical works combine respect for the actions of nature with the challenge of Carrara marble'' (Katy Corner, ArtNews NZ, Autumn 2007).

Trust Chairman Neil Plimmer says, "The sculptures interpret the tension and drama of Wellington's long history of seismic events. But the work also has strength and serenity, and invites contemplation, which makes it particularly appropriate to the university precinct.

"The seemingly random and scattered placement of the discs will encourage people to sit and walk among them. It is also a very tactile work, inviting touch.

Louise Purvis has offered us another major contribution to the sculpture gallery that is emerging on Wellington's streets. As a work developed in stone it is quite different from other recent public art in the city, and shows another dimension of New Zealanders' creative skills as these are reflected in sculpture,

The four components of the work are Topographical Map Section, which marks the location of a segment of the fault line that runs through Wellington; Seismic Shock which records an earthquake; Disrupt which reflects on the earth moving and disruption; and Split which tells of the results of an earthquake and the opening and movement of tectonic plates.

Louise Purvis's recent public commissions include Pepuna Wai Ora (Spring of Life) in Petone, and Promise Boat in the Auckland Domain. She was represented by the work Pod in the Changing Spaces exhibition on the Wellington Waterfront in 2002.

The Trust thank the donors who have made the commissioning of this work possible: TOWER, the Victoria University of Wellington and the Wellington City Council.

"Seismic is a direct response to the site. Each disc is an interpretation of events occurring during an earthquake. The discs are strewn about the site to evoke a sense of randomness. Seismic is intended to be a sculpture you pass through and perhaps contemplate the precarious nature of our environment along the way." Louise Purvis

 

 


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Peter Trevelyan: Mimetic Brotherhood
Regan Gentry: Subject to Change
Regan Gentry: Green Islands
Leon van den Eijkel in collaboration with Allan Brown: Urban Forest
Louise Purvis: Seismic
Cathryn Monro: Per Capita
Bill Culbert: SkyBlues
Len Lye: Water Whirler
Andrew Drummond: Tower of Light
Phil Price: Zephyrometer
Anton Parsons: Invisible City
Jeff Thomson: Shells
Robert Jahnke: Spinning Top
Phil Price: Protoplasm
Kon Dimopoulos: Pacific Grass
Brett Graham: Kaiwhakatere - The Navigator
Denis O'Connor: Rudderstone
Mary-Louise Browne: Body To Soul
Chris Booth: Peacemaker
Andrew Drummond: Listening & Viewing Device
Henry Moore: Bronze Form
Neil Dawson: Ferns
Tanya Ashken: Albatross
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