Prime Minister Bill English Meets with HAC Project Team
Prime Minister Bill English Meets with HAC Project
Team
Whangarei’s
Hundertwasser Art Centre with Wairau Maori Art Gallery takes
centre stage on Prime Minister’s Northland
visit
WHANGAREI: Prime Minster Bill
English says he is impressed and excited by plans for the
Hundertwasser Art Centre with Wairau Maori Art Gallery after
meeting with the project team in Whangarei on Friday.
The Prime Minister met with the Prosper Northland Trust, members of the Wairau Maori Art Gallery Board (WMAG), the HAC project team and the Whangarei Art Museum Trust to discuss the project and plans for achieving its upcoming June 30th deadline.
Mr English’s visit came at the request of Whangarei electoral MP Dr Shane Reti, who has been a vocal supporter of the project.
The Prime Minister discussed all elements of the Hundertwasser Art Centre project, including the development of Te Kakano – The Seed and the two distinct galleries that will be housed inside the building once complete.
After speaking with WMAG board chairwoman Elizabeth Ellis about the distinctiveness of the Wairau Maori Art Gallery, Mr English said he was impressed by the ongoing opportunity it presented to Maori artists throughout New Zealand.
"I was involved in setting up the Eastern Southland
Gallery in Gore. Bus loads are coming from Dunedin and
Invercargill and it is still going strong, so I can
understand what you are trying to do," he told the
group.
The Government committed $4 million to the
construction of the Hundertwasser Art Centre at the start of
2016 as a part of the Tai Tokerau Northland Economic Action
Plan, which identified 58 actions to support and enable the
growth of the Northland economy.
ENDS
Hundertwasser Art
Centre:
In 1993, Hundertwasser was invited by
the Mayor of Whangarei to design an art centre for the city.
He chose the former Northland Harbour Board building in the
Town Basin and made a number of visits to study the building
and sketch his ideas.
More than 20 years after inception
and 16 years after his death, the Hundertwasser Art Centre
with Wairau Maori Art Gallery project is now in the final
pre-construction stages.
Now a fully community-led
project run solely by volunteers. Fundraising is currently
underway, with $20.97 million needed before construction can
be started.
The HAC will be an iconic landmark on a grand
scale and the last authentic Hundertwasser building in the
world. Like the artist’s work, this stunning building will
be multi-faceted and multi-functional with features
including a state-of-the-art main gallery of
Hundertwasser’s work, a contemporary Māori Art Gallery,
café, cinema and student resource centre.
The Wairau
Maori Art Gallery will be one of two galleries inside the
building, and the only one in the world that is permanently
dedicated to exhibiting contemporary Maori art. Exhibitions
will rotate on a lively three-monthly schedule and the
Wairau Maori Art Gallery Board will work in partnership
with the Whangarei Art Museum to plan exhibitions.
It is
estimated that the Hundertwasser Art Centre will attract
over 150,000 paying visitors a year with studies from
Northland Inc estimating The HAC will have an economic
impact of $22mil a year for the region.
Visit www.yeswhangarei.co.nz for more
information about the HAC with Wairau Maori Art Gallery
project.