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Hundertwasser Art Centre in Whangārei
Off the beaten track with Kennedy Warne
Hundertwasser outside the "bottle house" he built in the Bay of Islands
There are no straight lines in the centre. Hundertwasser was vehemently opposed to them. So the balustrades are bent and come with whimsical touches.
Hundertwasser's artistic genius and pioneering ecological vision were not widely appreciated in New Zealand during his life. The new art centre aims to remedy that lack.
Hundertwasser lived and painted on his boat "Regentag" ("rainy day") for 10 years. His early life can be appreciated in a 1972 documentary that screens continuously in a theatrette at the centre
Fountain in the entrance courtyard combines a classical top with a Hundertwasser multicoloured base
Hundertwasser's name means "hundred waters," and water conservation was a lifelong concern for him
A conservation week poster by Hundertwasser, painted soon after he arrived in New Zealand to live, is one of more than 70 artworks on display
Entrance to Hundertwasser Art Centre, Whangārei, which opened in February
Hundertwasser centre chief executive Kathleen Drumm (left) discusses a water purification installation with local artist Heather Hunt
A model of the centre is displayed in one of the galleries
Touches of whimsy—another Hundertwasser signature—are everywhere in the centre, including this nest of ceramic eggs perched on a windowsill
The spiral is fundamental to Hundertwasser's thinking, and the centre makes abundant use of the motif, including in swirling tiles at the entrance
A pou carved by Chris Bailey greets visitors to the centre alongside Hundertwasser's trademark ceramic columns
Hundertwasser was a great believe in rooftop gardens. The centre features a rooftop forest with more than 3000 plants
The images in this gallery are used with permission and are subject to copyright conditions.