6 March 2014 MEDIA RELEASE
How does Wellington feel and what is it worth?
Insight into how New Zealand's capital city feels will be the result of a pop-up bank and art project led by Victoria
University researcher Dr Sarah Elsie Baker and Wellington based artist Vanessa Crowe.
‘Moodbank’ is a collaborative project, believed to be a world first, which will document the collective mood of
Wellington and allow people to consider how factors such as the weather, the traffic and who won the rugby, influence
how we feel.
“Governments and businesses have come to see the value in finding out how happy we are, but we are interested in complex
and contradictory moods. Sometimes we feel grumpy, rushed and excited at the same time,” says Dr Baker, lecturer in
Design Culture + Context at Victoria’s School of Design.
At the ‘Moodbank’, in the old ASB bank at 29 Manners Street from 13 to 22 March, visitors will be invited to visualise,
deposit and exchange emotion. Transactions can also be made via an ATM-style mood machine found in various locations
throughout the city, and online at www.moodbank.co.nz.
City spaces have often been thought about in terms of their function, says Ms Crowe, but the places in which we live
have a strong impact on mood. “How we feel is often overlooked—we hope to take the ‘Moodbank’ to different locations in
New Zealand to reveal and compare how people feel.”
“We chose to mimic and subvert the look and function of a bank in order to draw attention to the ways in which some
moods are commercially valuable and others not so,” says Dr Baker.
Throughout the project the collective moods of Wellington will be displayed via posters, video and a customised stock
market mood ticker, allowing a visualisation of the usually unseen mood of the city to emerge.
Dr Baker and Ms Crowe will discuss their inspiration for the project, and reflect on collective mood data at an event on
Thursday 20 March, 6.30pm, at 29 Manners Street, Wellington.
The ‘Moodbank’ project is run with funding and support from Victoria University, Wellington City Council Public Art Fund
and Urban Dream Brokerage.
ENDS