Completed Mt Cook mural makes history
A once bare stone wall on Hopper Street in central Wellington is now making history – literally.
Well-known local artist and Mt Cook resident Sheyne Tuffery has managed to design and paint the suburb’s past, with a
futuristic twist, over the 65-metre-long retaining wall at the corner of Hopper and Hanky streets.
Tuffery has taken the history of Mt Cook using the very stones this wall is made from, possibly quarried from a local
river bed, and created a mural that celebrates the past. It features representations of the area’s cultural history and
Tuffery’s own interpretation of the Pacific Islands and the ‘new’ Pacific of New Zealand.
Many of the images appear in Tuffery’s other works, such as the Pacific Island warrior, representing his connection to
the Pacific and his ancestors. Alongside these images, he has painted stacked half coconuts rising like a futuristic
utopian city or a modern take on the Pacific fale. A giant tuatara – representing New Zealand’s oldest resident – harks
back to a time before people inhabited the land.
Tuffery spent months researching Mt Cook’s heritage for this project and knows it well. He acknowledges the original
long-abandoned pā at Pukeahu that stood on the old Dominion Museum site, now the main building on Massey University’s
campus, which is shown as the traditional entrance to a marae.
A Massey Cossack in the form of a cowboy appears at one end of the mural as a reference to the Police barracks that
hosted the Massey Cossacks and their horses, from the days of the 1913 union riots on Wellington’s waterfront.
Sheyne says that working on the street and constructing an artwork of that size was an exhilarating experience. “That
little corner of town is a fascinating cross section of people, and the local community really liked what I was
achieving. I loved how cars and skate boarders could get really close to the mural. Can’t wait to do another one"
The Council’s Arts Programmes Advisor, Katie Taylor-Duke, says the mural represents the rich and diverse cultural
heritage of Mt Cook in a playful and accessible way. “It will be interesting to see if it becomes known as the ‘tuatara’
or the ‘cowboy’ mural as Wellingtonians adopt this wonderful new public art work.”
Funded through the Council’s Public Art Fund, Councillor Ray Ahipene-Mercer says the Hopper Street wall is a perfect
canvas for an artist such as Sheyne Tuffery. “We’re proud to see this ambitious work go on show and help to tell
Wellington’s stories through cultural history. The mural will also help to reduce tagging in the area.”
The mural will be officially opened at 10.30am on Thursday 3 April near the main entrance to Massey University at 1
Wallace Street. You are welcome to join Sheyne, and the Massey students who helped him, for morning tea.
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