City Rail Link

Newsletter - June 2021

Newsletter - June 2021

Unique Art Showcase

 

Artists who were formerly homeless have found a unique place to showcase their creative talents – inside one of the buildings used by the country’s biggest transport infrastructure project.  

Five sculptural reliefs by artists who belong to a homeless collective known as Awhina Mai Tatou Katoa (AMTK) greet visitors at the entrance of the Te Manawa building at 1 New North Road, Eden Terrace. Meaning ‘The Heart’, Te Manawa is home to the City Rail Link’s public visitor centre and staff training and induction facility.

One of Awhina Mai Tatou Katoa’s artists, Teare Turetahi, says he and his three fellow artists are “honoured and humbled to use their art and be part of CRL.” The other AMTK collective artists involved are Melvin Henry, Martin Rawiri and Rob Smith.

Their sculptural reliefs are to be used as visual learning aids incorporating painting and traditional carving patterns.

Te Manawa is a place of learning and the reliefs will be used to share mātauranga – traditional knowledge and education – with those who view them.     

City Rail Link’s lead contractor, the Link Alliance, welcomes the collective’s contribution.  

“We’re very pleased to accept the collective’s creative works as an indoor extension to what we call Auckland’s largest public art project with local artwork already displayed on perimeter fences around our main construction sites,” says Francois Dudouit, Project Director for the Link Alliance.

“The project will have a huge impact on Auckland’s future, but the Awhina Mai Tatou Katoa artists remind us that it is equally important not to lose sight of the past and the themes and narratives important to Tāmaki Makaurau (Auckland). Their works rightly sit at Te Manawa where people come to learn and to share.”

 
Nigel Horrocks