News

Call for proposals: The Collin Post 4 Plinths Project

Sculpture Award 2026

The Wellington Sculpture Trust is pleased to announce applications are now open for the 2026 Collin Post 4 Plinths Project. The successful artist will receive $50,000 to realise new works to be sited on the concrete forecourt ‘plinths’ outside Te Papa Tongarewa, Museum of New Zealand, Wellington. This call for proposals facilitates selection of the tenth commission and will be in place for two years from early 2026.

The Collin Post 4 Plinths Project provides a prestigious opportunity for established and emerging artists through the reputation of the project, the quality of the artworks installed in previous rounds and the prominence of the site, one of the most visited in New Zealand.

Sabine Marcelis’ Merging Blocks (2024-2026) is currently on show. Previous recipients of the award are: Ben Pearce (2022-2024), Yolunda Hickman (2020–2022), Ruth Watson (2018–2020); Kereama Taepa (2016–2018), Glen Hayward (2014–2016), Joanna Langford (2012–2014); Peter Trevelyan (2010–2012); and Regan Gentry (2008–2010). 

Descriptions and photographs of these can be seen on the Trust’s website. 

The opportunity is open to both New Zealand and international artists and the artist retains ownership of the work at the completion of the project. 

Download a detailed brief here

APPLICATIONS HAVE NOW CLOSED

We look forward to announcing the successful awardee in January 2025.

Forty years of public art in the capital

A great article from WCC's Our Wellington website read here

 

 

Arts Editor for the New Zealand Arts Review, John Daly-Peoples' article on HALO read here

 

 

 

Sue Elliott's article from The Post, published in September, about Regan Gentry's sculpture Subject to Change: Sculpture reminder all cities subject to change read here 

 

 

Dom Post shines a light on WST

At the beginning of the year The Dominion Post shone a light on WST in a series of six articles written by Chair, Sue Elliott. The articles covered some of WST's history alongside a focus on several of the sculptures the Trust has helped bring to life. Each article can be accessed here through links below each image and are presented in their published order giving a chronological look at the Trust over the last 40 years. 

 

 

How an unassuming albatross became a rallying call for public sculpture in Wellington read here

 

 

How a now-defunct council scheme helped bring Henry Moore's art to the capital read here

 

 

The story behind Robert Jahnke's Spinning Top off Wellington's Golden Mile read here

 

A journey of sculpture along Wellington's windy Cobham Drive read here 

 

 

 

Kaiwhakatere/The Navigator: Symbolic structures visual markers of the arrival and settlement of two cultures read here 

 

 

 

Joe Sheehan walks the line with elegant simplicity read here

PARK(ing) Day 2024

PARK(ing) Day 2024 - CALL FOR PROPOSALS 

We are excited to announce the call for proposals for PARK(ing) Day 2024 is now open!

Submissions are due on 15 January 2024, with PARK(ing) Day itself scheduled for Saturday 2 March. The following Saturday 9 March is set aside in case of bad weather. 

We've also increased the contribution paid to each successful proposal to $500!

The mission of PARK(ing) Day is to call attention to the need for more urban open space, to generate critical debate around how public space is created and allocated, and to improve the quality of urban human habitat. We welcome submissions from creatives and community groups interested in taking over a Cuba Street car park for the course of one day. 

Download the full brief here

 

Background

Usually held in the northern hemisphere in September, PARK(ing) Day is an annual open-source global event where citizens, artists and designers collaborate temporarily to transform metered parking spaces into “PARK(ing)” spaces: temporary public places. The mission of PARK(ing) Day is to call attention to the need for more urban open space, to generate critical debate around how public space is used, created and allocated, and to improve the quality of urban human habitat … at least until the meter runs out! 

The original PARK(ing) Day concept was initiated by Rebar, www.rebargroup.org

Image: PARK(ing) Day 2023, Judge's Choice winner, WE THE COLLATERAL Your Highlight 


Neil Plimmer: What is the meaning of “public” in “public art?”

At some risk of oversimplification, there are two major approaches to deciding on public art. One is that good art is good art wherever it is, in a gallery, private collection, company lobby, public space or other, and the issue of distinguishing public art from the other art and art locations is hardly significant. The alternative is that art in public spaces is qualitatively different, and this difference needs to be understood and respected.

The centrepiece of the second view is that the audience is different: most people seeing art in a public space are not seeking to see it but are passing by, while in contrast people seeing art in other locations are likely to be there intentionally for the  purpose of viewing the art. The audience for public art is therefore much broader and less specialised.

That much is relatively easy to accept, but the next stage is more complex: if you are seeking public art that is both good art and widely accessible art, how do you modify good art to reflect or relate to this public art audience expecting accessibility? 

A part of the answer is the selection process. While gallery and private art may represent the selection choices of an arts professional, curator or individual, the selection of public art requires a more collective and less professionally oriented process. But desirably the process will not be structured in a manner that ignores professional art input. 

At the Wellington Sculpture Trust a two-tier system embodies this balance. There is an arts advisory panel of professional persons from the art world which advances its selections and the reasons for these, and a board of trustees who on the whole are not arts professionals but representatives of the community, passionate about art or the city landscapes in which public art is placed. While there is normally agreement between the two, the board is responsible for the final selection in each case.

Another part of the answer is to have a concept or over-arching approach to what the commissioning programme is trying to achieve with the installation of public art. It is clear in many cities around the world their ambition is to ensure popular support and engagement by commissioning what may be called populist art. This is normally figurative and literal, with examples abounding, such as of a bronze sculpture of a person sitting on a bench perhaps reading, with an empty seat beside him for viewers to sit on and be photographed. By some counts this is dumbed-down or kitsch or plonked art (depending on the writer) but for others it at least ensures there is no popular adverse reaction calling for its removal and it may do more by achieving tourist attraction status.

 Wellington’s concept is rather different. The city aspires to be the nation’s art as well as its political capital and maintains high quality art forms and organisations in numerous fields such as the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, the Royal New Zealand Ballet and the New Zealand Book Council known as Read New Zealand. It was and is logical that a collection of art in its public spaces should reinforce the standards implicit in this. That has meant not literal art but pieces with conceptual values embedded in them. The challenge this poses is demanding, for the concept and quality cannot ignore that need for public accessibility.

The outcome is in the sculptures themselves. One out of some 30 commissioned is close to being figurative, Virginia King’s Katherine Mansfield by Midland Park, although it is stylised and outsized compared with a standard statue. Michel Tuffery’s Nga Kina qualifies also for being literal; it is outsized and realistic if not figurative in a narrow sense. The great majority, however, are much further removed from this style. But nor are they purely abstract. Nearly all have an element of easy-to-relate-to reality in the form of, for example, braille in the case of Anton Parson’s Invisible City, earthquake movements in the case of Louise Purvis’s Seismic or a ship’s rudder in the case of Andrew Drummond’s Rudderstone.

The litmus test of whether this balance, between quality and accessibility, has been achieved or not lies in the response, and this, although largely anecdotal, suggests that in Wellington’s case appropriate selections have been made. The artworks normally have highly favourable reviews in the professional art journals and a warm enough public response in so far as this is measured through informal feedback. Some of this is uncertain rather than positive – ‘I don’t understand it but I still respect that it is there’ – but rarely is it negative.

Delving deeper into this difference between public and professional attitudes to art, there is evidence that a general public approach is influenced by an attachment to form and related features of much traditional art such as perspective, scale and colour, in contrast to the current professional view of art in which such factors play little role compared with matters of context. Modernism and post-modernism mean a lot less to a general public than to arts professionals.

Extending this, the contemporary approach of expanding the notion of what is art to include almost all of today’s culture – advertising, fashion, television, graffiti art, tattooing and so on – widens the difference between public and professional perceptions of art.

Some scientific studies offer insights into popular views of art. One suggests the preference is not straight literalism or photo-reality. It shows that most people’s brains light up most when shown an artwork which has about a 20 percent variation from reality. It seems some interpretation is expected and valued, but if you move more that 20 percent away from reality in the direction of abstraction or disguising of the object, you will lose viewer interest. It is not easy to measure 20 percent variation, but plausibly the Katherine Mansfield sculpture in Wellington, being oversize and somewhat stylised, fits this prescription, and needless to say the public feedback suggests it is among the most popular the Sculpture Trust has installed.

Another piece of research, based on the manner in which the pupils of our eyes expand when we see something appealing, such as an attractive person, and contract when we see something we view negatively, such as a shark, claims that our eyes contract when faced with abstract art.

And yet another proposes that our brain uses reason and order to counter the fact of  the world being subjected to increasing disorder – the second law of thermodynamics – and finds an attraction in orderly configurations particularly as found in nature, such as a spiral, a sphere or a crystal. In Wellington’s public art it is possible to see such configurations, such as the discs of Spinning Top or Seismic or the well-proportioned rectangles of Invisible City or Rudderstone, and to correlate these to wide public acceptance.

A quite separate factor, besides that of audiences and their perceptions, in identifying the difference between public and other art, relates to the outdoors location of public art. This requires intensive engineering relating to seasonality and weather, human contact including vandalism and an ability to withstand a cluttered environment (the lines of sight to many public sculptures are impeded by commercial signs, for example). These conditions require a robustness in the artwork that does not apply to art in galleries and most other private places.

This in turn has led to the development of a different type of relationship between the artist and engineers and tradesmen. It has become sufficient for the artist to conceive and design the artwork, and then contract others to construct or fabricate it. Catherine Monro’s Per Capita, made of corten steel, is a Wellington example. There may be some elements of this happening in other art, but it can hardly apply to painting and if it applies to three-dimensional indoor art it is a much less evolved relationship than for public art.

Another very practical consequence of this outdoors impact is the caution required in commissioning sculpture with moving parts. Although such pieces are desirable because of a heightened interaction with the viewer, they invariably involve much higher cost because of engineering and testing requirements – Len Lye’s Water Whirler for example had thousands of hours of testing before it was approved for installation – and also much higher levels of maintenance over the sculpture’s lifetime, and can only be installed after the most careful consideration of these factors. These requirements will rarely be manifested with indoor art.

Placing sculpture outside raises the much-debated issues of site specificity. Art inside whether two or three dimensional does not normally engage with this – a room or a wall does not impose this consideration. A painting may be unsuitable for a particular inside space, but that does not make the artwork site specific – it could be suitably placed in any number of other internal places.

There are gradations in the issue of site specificity. In Wellington’s experience the artwork in each case is deemed to be compatible with the space allocated, a good and sympathetic fit, but it is rare that a commission would be so specific to the site that it could not be contemplated to place it elsewhere. Nga Kina would be an example of tight site specificity. It is a work that necessarily is half in the water and is carefully designed and scaled for its harbourside location.

At the other extreme, Green Islands has shown how site specificity can be turned on its head. The artist contemplated the site, the four plinths outside Te Papa, and felt the over-arching feature was wide expanse of bare paved plaza surrounding the plinths and the bleak absence of vegetation. He would therefore make each plinth an island of “greenery” but added to the irony of this by designing a series of native trees made of wire. The sculpture was a striking example of an artwork chosen because of its very intense relationship to the site.

Yet the work was subsequently installed in the Botanic Garden surrounded by vegetation. This site retained the four plinths elements of the original (four replica plinths were constructed for the placement of the wire trees) but in every other respect it is hard to imagine a site more opposite from the original and the concept that underpinned the work.

Sometimes the site does more than require the artwork to accommodate it: it may even determine the nature of the artwork. Regan Gentry’s Subject to Change is arguably a case of that. A site was chosen in a part of the city that had housed early settlers, and their Victorian homes were variously being preserved or destroyed to make way for developments. It was mandatory that the sculpture should relate to this history of the location and its buildings, and the artwork chosen achieved this both in its form and concept.

A further factor, still relating to public art’s outdoors environment, is the response of reviewers and critics. The public space siting of the art prompts them to make references that are different from their reviewing of gallery and most other art, and they do not seem to do it well. Many say, for example, that the artwork “interrogates” the space, without citing what the process of interrogation is nor the conclusions of the interrogation. The consideration of public art in its location is more understandably expressed by the language of the urban designer or landscape architect discussing, for example, scale and compatibility or contrast with surrounding features.

It is an aside to note that some of this public space critique language is spilling back into art in interiors: a recent review of an artwork comprising a piece of cloth hanging on the wall of a gallery claims that it is “articulating space” but like “interrogation” this needs elaboration to be convincing.

The selection of public art, then, requires an ongoing acceptance of significant conditionalities surrounding the viewing and physical environments of this art. At its simplest, “public” means “accessible”. Here are two other views of this that I respect. An architectural journal argues that good art is “Tough art, which does not ingratiate with accessibility or prettiness.”  This is not to oppose accessibility but to require this to be achieved by means that do not ingratiate – a likely reference to that “dumbed down” art.

Another view comes from a different art form: the expatriate New Zealand composer and arts laureate Lyell Creswell was being interviewed after winning an international composition competition and was asked, “What were the organisers looking for?” He answered, “A work that pushed out the boundaries without losing accessibility.” That is such a good articulation of what good public art requires.

It is another story to describe the many areas that public and other art share. These relate to the need of both to respond to social change, the drive for diversity, greater recognition of the work of minority groups and the empowerment of marginalised people, the polarisation of political attitudes, the impact of the internet and social media, and so on.

August 2020 

For more of Neil's writing see neilplimmer.net

Neil Plimmer: Yawning gaps in Wellington's art landscape

Published 20 August, 2020

https://www.stuff.co.nz/opinion/122469396/yawning-gaps-in-wellingtons-art-landscape

OPINION: Around the world cities are giving to artists bulldozers and the like, and a site, perhaps a used quarry, and asking them to make land art. Hillsides are terraced, small valleys filled with water to make lakes, paths and walkways constructed. You can view the art piece from afar or above or walk all over it.

It is a public art trend of the last decade or two. Many of the resulting art forms are quite stunning, some formal while others remain more rugged but still visibly a work of art. They all show strong popularity as visitor attractions.

Wellington’s claim to be New Zealand’s cultural capital has yawning gaps in its art array, with no land art nor a sculpture park. The latter is another well-established feature of cities seeking to project themselves as creative centres offering engaging lifestyles.

Auckland has stolen a march in both these features. It has two world class works of land art, the famous Maya Lin’s A Fold in the Field at Gibbs Farm (she is the designer of the Vietnam War memorial on The Mall in Washington DC) and Virginia King’s Koru at Brick Bay Sculpture Park (she is the artist for Wellington’s Katherine Mansfield sculpture at Midland Park).

And Auckland has at least four prominent sculpture parks, so good that every time a Wellington group organises a tour to Auckland to visit them it is sold out, even if it is highly priced to be a fundraiser for the organising group.

Is Wellington bereft of space and resources to meet this challenge? The spaces are sitting there waiting, ideal for these roles and not far from the CBD, and the initial financial resource is on offer.

The sites are on Watts Peninsula, the long green promontory of land on the eastern side of Evans Bay, above Shelly Bay, running from the housing area and the old Mt Crawford prison in the south to the Massey Memorial and Point Haswell in the north.

It is surplus central government land of 68 hectares, waiting for some imaginative use.

In the 2019 Budget the minister of finance announced that the land would be kept in government ownership and transferred to the Department of Conservation to be a reserve. The roles of preparing a development plan and the future management of the land was assigned to Wellington City Council, with $4 million of taxpayer funds to help get this under way.

Fifteen months later and there is no evidence that anything has happened. Does Wellington care if this vast area remains in scrub, its potential for the city ignored?

If the bulldozers and front-end loaders could move in, the Miramar side of Wellington would benefit from an inspiring new attraction, and Wellington would reinforce its cultural capital aspirations by art features that are particularly well placed because of their general accessibility and their visibility from aircraft arriving at and departing from the airport.

Neil Plimmer is a trustee and former chair of the Wellington Sculpture Trust.

Read more of Neil's writing: neilplimmer.net

Call for proposals: 4 Plinths Sculpture Award 2022

Wellington Sculpture Trust is calling for proposals for the 2022 4 Plinths sculpture commission.

Every two years $50,000 is awarded to an artist to produce a new temporary work installed on the four 'plinths' on the forecourt of Te Papa Tongarewa, The Museum of New Zealand. The call is open to emerging and established artists alike. 

The deadline for proposals is 31 July 2020.

Download the full brief here

For more information email: wellingtonsculpture@xtra.co.nz

 

PARK(ing) Day 2020

Wellington PARK(ing) Day 2020

On Friday 6 March, twenty two Cuba Street car parks were occupied by creatives, architects, urban designers and community groups, proposing alternative ways we might use our public space. Congratulations to judges' choice winners Bernie Harfleet and Donna Turtle Sarten for their project Max and Bella and friends (detail), an enigmatic reflection on mental illness. Congratulations also to Judah Jackson who won the people's choice award for his car park Put yourself in others' shoes.

Thank you to Wellington City Council and Wellington Community Trust for supporting the event.