Sensory stimuli

The restored gates to the Botanic Gardens impressed my friend and me this morning when, instead of taking our usual beach walk, we decided to visit the Arts Centre. The new entrance is grander than the previous one which was tucked in beside the Museum.

The annual Sculpture Festival is on in the Great Hall. There is a wonderful variety of creative work: glass, metal, ceramic, some with political messages and many with environmental and indigenous themes and materials.

I love the energy of these sculptures:

There were more in the quadrangle.

Very tall chairs

We walked around the back of the Arts Centre where the renovations are still in progress. We peered into an large artists’ studio off this courtyard and considered the interesting (incongruous?) mix of metal air bridge, brickwork, geometrical stone paving, exposed pipe work and plywood.

It will be interesting to watch how this area develops. What will the paving stones lead to?

The design of the original Arts Centre buildings is neo-gothic. Quirky features such as stepped windows, curved corners, and circular windows fit this style – all in one corner. Even the drainpipes are ornate.

We cruised around a craft market admiring the ingenuity of the artists and held kauri gum shapes thousands of years old in our hands. After all that – plus delicious chocolate and strawberry muffins and coffee/hot chocolate – we felt our senses enlivened by the morning’s stimuli.

Home again, I feel I am looking with new eyes at the shapes and textures of the garden. Suddenly, it’s alive with sculptural shapes – and actual sculptures – which I had forgotten or taken for granted.

Spot: Long-necked ceramic woman (a present from walking friend), ‘Orville’s Dream’ metal sculpture made from found materials, ‘Loopy Lou’ copper sprinkler, 3-bowl water feature, fish lure (found on beach) with barnacle attached, and a cat-ladder leading to a platform. There’s an old copper in there too, repurposed as a planter.

A beach for all seasons

Once a week, all year round, my friend and I drive 20 minutes east to the beach. In winter, while others head west to go skiing, we enjoy the changing moods of the sea and sky. This week we paddled for the first time since autumn.

A little chilly, but refreshing.
August 2020

The sky was blue and clear so we had a clear view of the Port Hills and the Kaikoura mountains. Yet, just a week earlier, you could hardly see a thing!

The footprints told us others were out walking too.
August 2020

We’ve encountered all sorts of weather over years of winters, including stinging wind-blown sand and biting southerly winds. In August 2016, there was snow on the Port Hills, but a beautifully clear day.

The beach is different every visit. It depends on the tide, weather, and what has happened over the week, such as high tides or storms which wash up drifts of seaweed and shells, push the sand into banks against the sand dunes or wash the beach smooth and clean of debris.

One morning, we found a fishing boat had washed up overnight.

22 December 2019

Sometimes artists exhibit their work at the beach while other people find driftwood irresistible for creative expression.

This week I saw these two works by Russell Clark in the Christchurch Art Gallery. They celebrate the sea and its exhilarating effect on us, using light, perspective, shape and texture.

The painting on the left is View from the Pier. The sculpture is called Beach Figure. The texture of the garment reminds me of driftwood and sand shaped by the wind.

Nature does some interesting sculpting too.

We, and many others, find the atmosphere of sea, sky and fresh air uplifting. There are people out walking, running, cycling, surfing, and exercising their dogs and horses all year round.

Both sea and sky have changing moods.

May 2020

Often, we walk up the dunes to find a view from the top which takes our breath away.

Aug 2020
April 2015
April 2014