Scoop has an Ethical Paywall
Licence needed for work use Learn More

Art & Entertainment | Book Reviews | Education | Entertainment Video | Health | Lifestyle | Sport | Sport Video | Search

 

Hidden Masterton mural in public eye again


Wednesday, July 11, 2018
Hidden Masterton mural in public eye again

A Massey University researcher’s quest to preserve the work of artist and craftsman E. Mervyn Taylor reaches another milestone this week when a recently-revealed mural, at the site of the former Masterton Post Office, will be the focus of a talk and walking tour.

 How the
re-discovered Early Settlers mural looks after being
retrieved from its walled hiding place at the site of the
former Masterton Post Office.

How the re-discovered Early Settlers mural looks after being retrieved from its walled hiding place at the site of the former Masterton Post Office.

The artist created two ceramic tile murals that capture significant moments in Masterton’s and New Zealand’s history. They include the mural Lest We Forget in the Masterton War Memorial Stadium Hall of Memories to commemorate the two world wars, and a work entitled Early Settlers that once decorated the outer entry to the post office.

The post office building was sold into private ownership in the 1980s and the mural was subsequently enclosed in the ground floor of the building and secreted behind a wall in a retail space in 2009. After many years, the building has been sold to a new owner, Masterton developer Trevor Pearce, who is strengthening and refurbishing the building, and has removed the wall concealing the mural, returning it to public display.

Advertisement - scroll to continue reading

PhD candidate Bronwyn Holloway-Smith, who was director of the E. Mervyn Taylor Mural Search and Recovery Project at Massey University’s College of Creative Arts, will be giving a talk at the Aratoi Wairarapa Museum of Art and History on Saturday July 14. She will also lead a guided tour of the two Masterton murals accompanied by archivist and local historian Gareth Winter, who will speak about the war memorial mural. Mr Winter has written about that mural for Ms Holloway-Smith’s book Wanted: The Search for the Modernist Murals of E Mervyn Taylor, which was published by Massey University Press in March.

She expressed excitement that the previously hidden work, which was protected and unable to be moved without a notified consent, will now be back on public display.

“Previously hidden behind a wall, the building’s new owners have made the sensible decision to return this extraordinary tile mural back to public view.”

The search for the missing mural and 11 others created by Taylor between 1956 to 1964, was inspired by the discovery of one of his surviving murals, Te Ika-Māui, the story of Māui fishing up the North Island, stored in cardboard boxes in a disused cable landing station.

PhD candidate
Bronwyn Holloway-Smith with the E. Mervyn Taylor mural Te
Ika-Māui, the story of Māui fishing up the North Island,
that inspired the search for up to 13 others missing murals
by the artist. (Picture credit Louise Hatton).

PhD candidate Bronwyn Holloway-Smith with the E. Mervyn Taylor mural Te Ika-Māui, the story of Māui fishing up the North Island, that inspired the search for up to 13 others missing murals by the artist. (Picture credit Louise Hatton).

Ms Holloway-Smith (an artist herself) made the discovery in 2014 when she was researching the history of the Southern Cross Cable, New Zealand’s primary internet connection to the world, as part of a commission she was completing with Wellington-based public art commissioning group Letting Space and the marketing firm JWT in Auckland. Since then she has led efforts to meticulously clean and digitise the work through her project, Te Ika-a-Akoranga, and subsequently made colour-matched, full-scale gouache paintings to fill the gaps left by 16 missing tiles.

E. Mervyn Taylor, who studied at Wellington Polytechnic, a forerunner of the College, also used carved wood panels, sand blasted windows and paint to create his distinctive works made at the end of his career. “His work provides us with a fresh perspective on New Zealand history that hasn’t necessarily been protected but is essential in ensuring a more accurate understanding of what we represent as a nation,” Ms Holloway-Smith says.

Bronwyn Holloway-Smith’s illustrated talk is at Aratoi Wairarapa Museum of Art and History, 12 Bruce St, Masterton at 2pm, Saturday July 14.

Click here to access information about the book Wanted: The Search for the Modernist Murals of E Mervyn Taylor, published by Massey University Press http://www.masseypress.ac.nz/books/all/all/wanted and here http://murals.nz/ for the mural project page.


© Scoop Media

Advertisement - scroll to continue reading
 
 
 
Culture Headlines | Health Headlines | Education Headlines

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

LATEST HEADLINES

  • CULTURE
  • HEALTH
  • EDUCATION
 
 
 
 

Join Our Free Newsletter

Subscribe to Scoop’s 'The Catch Up' our free weekly newsletter sent to your inbox every Monday with stories from across our network.