31 May 2015

A celebration of trees: May: the pohutukawa

As my regular followers will know, one of my photography projects this year is a celebration of trees. To celebrate both the beauty and benefits of trees I have been posting a photo each day of a tree or trees. If you’re interested, you can see these photographs in my Picasa album

I am also sharing my favourite trees in a monthly blog post – this is the fifth of those posts. The previous ones can be viewed by clicking on the following links: January (one particular favourite), February (about lime avenues), March (on the subject of forests) and April (about the greening of the trees in the British springtime).  


This month, as I’m back in New Zealand for a short time, my chosen tree is the pohutukawa (Metrosideros excelsa), unofficially labelled New Zealand’s Christmas tree because its blossom, which ranges from stunning crimson to vibrant red, usually graces our coastlines, parks and gardens from November to February. I say usually because I recently found a tree still blossoming in late May – one very confused pohutukawa. As you can see from the photos here, the flowers are formed from an unusual mass of stamens.

Though I doubt there is any scientific proof to support the idea, most New Zealanders will tell you that when the pohutukawa blooms early, we’re in for a long hot summer. The beliefs of the Te Arawa Maori are even more detailed when it comes to using pohutukawa blossom for weather forecasting:

If flowering starts on the upper branches and progresses downwards, a cold and winter-like season will follow. But if flowering starts on the lower branches and progresses upwards, a warm and pleasant season lies ahead.

Pohutukawa are usually multi-trunked and, though they sometimes stand statuesquely upright, growing up to 25 metres (82 feet) tall, they also sprawl drunkenly across the ground and can often be found clinging precariously to rocky cliffs. 




As its scientific name indicates (Metrosideros means iron-hearted), the tree’s very dense, so very strong wood is one of the reasons it's able to survive the tough coastal environment. As well as the density of its wood, the pohutukawa also has trunks and branches that are frequently adorned with matted, fibrous aerial roots. These help the tree cling to those steep cliffs and also search out pockets of soil and moisture, aiding the pohutukawa’s survival in difficult conditions.


There is one particular old tree at Cape Reinga, the northernernmost tip of New Zealand, that holds great significance for Maori New Zealanders. According to the NZ History website

this small, venerated pohutukawa is known as ‘the place of leaping’. It is from here that the spirits of the dead begin their journey to their traditional homeland of Hawaiki. From this point the spirits leap off the headland and climb down the roots of the 800-year-old tree, descending into the underworld on their return journey.

Although the pohutukawa can grow up to 1000 years old, in recent years it has been in danger of dying out in some regions of New Zealand. Twenty five years ago, an organisation was founded to raise awareness of the plight of these beautiful trees and to support their replenishment (and that of other endangered trees) throughout the country. You can read more about Project Crimson and how they – and you  can help with the survival of the pohutukawa on their website.

Life’s better with trees!




29 May 2015

Bee to the blossom

Though each season has its beauty and I am a big fan of winter, as the cool of winter freshens the air and the days shorten I do like to remember the beauty of summers past. And what is more reminiscent of summertime than vibrantly blooming flowers and the busy buzzing bees they attract.

Here, then, is a blog to brighten up those brief, grey and frequently wet days of approaching winter.

Bee to the blossom, moth to the flame; Each to his passion; what's in a name? ~ Helen Hunt Jackson, ‘Vanity of Vanities’


How doth the little busy bee / Improve each shining hour, / And gather honey all the day / From every opening flower! ~ Isaac Watts, Divine Songs for Children, XX, ‘Against Idleness and Mischief’


A swarm of bees in May / Is worth a load of hay; / A swarm of bees in June / Is worth a silver spoon; / A swarm of bees in July / Is not worth a fly. ~ Anonymous, An old rhyme


The keeping of bees is like the direction of sunbeams. ~ Henry David Thoreau


One can no more approach people without love than one can approach bees without care. Such is the quality of bees.… ~ Leo Tolstoy


Such bees! Bilbo had never seen anything like them. "If one were to sting me," he thought, "I should swell up as big as I am!” ~ J. R. R. Tolkein, The Hobbit


Aerodynamically, the bumble bee shouldn’t be able to fly, but the bumble bee doesn’t know it so it goes on flying anyway. ~ Mary Kay Ash


They all seemed hungry, happy, and healthy enough in their buzzing – oh the days were hot, and the noise of bees filled the air that was dusty with pollen and sun haze.… ~ Janet Frame, Scented Gardens for the Blind


The men of experiment are like the ant; they only collect and use. But the bee ... gathers its materials from the flowers of the garden and of the field, but transforms and digests it by a power of its own. ~ Leonardo da Vinci


The only reason for making a buzzing-noise that I know of is because you're a bee ... The only reason for being a bee that I know of is making honey ... and the only reason for making honey is so I can eat it. ~ Winnie the Pooh, A.A. Milne, The House at Pooh Corner



The flower doesn’t dream of the bee. It blossoms and the bee comes. ~ Mark Nepo

23 May 2015

Birds of New Zealand: part 4

I am not a twitcher – they have lists of birds and do anything, go anywhere at the drop of a hat to add to the ever-increasing list of birds they’ve spotted, to the point of being obsessive and often to the detriment of the birds they’re trying to see – but I am becoming much more serious about and dedicated to bird watching.

Naturally enough that also means my collection of bird photos continues to grow apace, which also means it’s about time I posted another blog about some of our wonderful New Zealand birds (my three previous blogs on the subject can be seen here and here and here).

This post covers a rather eclectic selection of birds, in this case based on the Western Springs location where I photographed them (though some photos were taken in other places on other days).


Tui (Prosthemadera novaeseelandiae)
Called the parson bird by the early European immigrants to New Zealand, presumably because of the resemblance of the white tufts of feathers at the front of its neck to a priest’s clerical collar, the tui is anything but pious. In fact, it has a habit of imbibing so much nectar from blossoming trees that it becomes quite intoxicated and sings uproariously. Its song is one of its most endearing qualities, highly variable, pleasingly melodic but also including a comprehensive vocabulary of clicks, creaks, cackles and groans.

Beautifully plumaged in shades ranging from iridescent greens and blues through dark browns to an inky black, the tui has quite a distinctive flight pattern, with louder flapping than most other birds due to its relatively short wide wings. Chances are, then, that you’ll hear the tui before you see it.

Left: tui. Right: New Zealand pigeon.

New Zealand pigeon (Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae)
Our native pigeon, also known by its Maori name kererū, may be a plump critter but, in the breeding season, its aerial displays can be spectacular, flying high, swooping fearlessly earthwards, then stalling and pulling swiftly up before a potentially fatal impact with treetops or the ground. I presume female pigeons are suitably impressed!


With feathers of metallic green and a crisp clean white, with red eyes and red feet, New Zealand pigeons are essential to our forest environment. By feasting on the fruit of forest trees and shrubs, then flying around pooping a lot, they ensure the seeds of those trees and shrubs are widely dispersed. Sadly, though illegal, humans have been known to feast on the pigeon, meaning its numbers are not as high as they once were.


Male brown teal

Brown teal (Anas chlorotis)
The brown teal is listed ‘at risk’ so I consider myself very lucky to have seen this little beauty. Once widespread throughout New Zealand, the brown teal is now mostly confined to the northern parts of the North Island because of the predations of introduced species like rats and stoats and the loss of their habitat. You can read more about efforts to conserve these pretty little creatures on brownteal.com.  

When you get the opportunity, it’s an easy bird to identify – it’s slightly smaller than a mallard and predominantly dark brown. At breeding time, the male has a distinctive iridescent green sheen on the back of his head, as you can see in the photo at right.

Paradise shelduck (Tadorna variegata)
According to my bird guide, the paradise shelduck is ‘highly sexually dimorphic’ – for the uninitiated, that’s not some kind of kinky fetish; it just means the male and female look very different, as you can see from the photos below. It’s a large duck, somewhere between the size of a mallard and a goose.

The paradise shelduck’s Maori name, pūtangitangi, gives a clue to the sound of its distinctive and incessant calls: ‘pū’ means the ‘origin of’ and tangi is ‘to weep’ or ‘to utter a plaintive cry’. The chicks aren’t quite so maudlin though and cheep like any other duckling. And, as you can see from the photos here, they are extremely cute little bundles of fluff.

Paradise shelduck chick at various stages of development

Paradise shelduck: female at left and male at right


Black swan (Cygnus atratus)
Many people think of the black swan as an Australian bird – it is, after all, both are the state symbol and the state emblem of Western Australia. However, scientists have discovered that the black swan was present here in New Zealand at the time of first human settlement, but had been hunted to extinction by the time Europeans first arried. In the 1860s, they were deliberately reintroduced from Australia and, judging by how quickly the local population grew, they may, at the same time, also have re-colonised New Zealand naturally – flown or been blown across the ditch from Australia.

Appropriately enough, the black swan’s Latin name atratus means ‘to be clothed in black for mourning’. Perhaps that’s why some people believe it to be a harbinger of bad luck. Personally, I think the swan dressed all in black is a very stylish and elegant-looking bird.


Much of the information about these birds came from my much-thumbed copy of Paul Scofield and Brent Stephenson, Birds of New Zealand: A Photographic Guide, Auckland University Press, Auckland, 2013.

Black swan, adult at left, cygnets feeding at right



20 May 2015

Lost at Sea

In the course of researching family history you often uncover tragedy and sadness. This is one of those stories.

My second cousin three times removed, Martin Hodgetts Bust, was born on 9 August 1884 in England, in the small Lincolnshire village of Winterton. On his father’s side, Martin came from farming stock – in fact, the Bust family had been farming in various parts of Lincolnshire since the sixteenth century. Martin’s grandfather Henry was a farmer of 600-odd acres, a substantial holding in the mid 1800s, and his father Frederic was an agricultural engineer. Frederic and his brother Joseph were noted for inventing, manufacturing and selling agricultural machinery, and held several patents for chaff-cutting and ensilage-making machines.

A watercolour of Winterton by C. M. Gunnell, 1992.
Martin’s mother Sallie had been born in India, where her father was a tea planter, though Martin never knew grandfather Hodgetts – he had died in India in 1860, aged just 38. In fact, Martin never met any of his grandparents as all four had died before he was born.

Martin’s parents, Frederic Bust and Sallie Hodgetts were married in 1879 in Bridlington, Yorkshire, Sallie’s hometown, but made their home in Park Street, Winterton. Martin had two older siblings: his brother Frederic was born in 1881 and his sister Millicent was born in 1882, and the family’s domestic servant Betsy Barr also lived with them in their Winterton home.

Sadly, tragedy struck the Bust family soon after Martin was born. He never had the chance to get to know his father as Frederic Bust died in June 1885 when he was only 31 and Martin was not quite 10 months old. Without her husband’s income and with three children under five years old, it would have been difficult for Sally to cope, even though I’m sure she had help from both her husband’s and her own family.

Without his brother to assist with the agricultural business, Martin’s uncle Joseph found things tough going so put the agricultural business up for sale in 1887 and decided to make a life for himself in America. Sallie and her children would have gained some benefit from the sale of the business but that wouldn’t have kept the family in food and lodgings for long. It’s no surprise then to find that, at the time of the 1891 census, both Martin and his sister Millicent were boarding with sisters Frances and Florence Robinson in Sallie’s hometown of Bridlington, in Yorkshire. The Robinson women were teachers so I assume this was how the children received at least part of their education, though Martin also attended Grammar School in Driffield. 

HMS Conway. Image by Flapdragon. Licensed under public domain via Wikimedia Commons: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HMSConway1.jpg#/media/File:HMSConway1.jpg

In September 1898, shortly after celebrating his fourteenth birthday, Martin started a new life in Liverpool. He had been enrolled at HMS Conway, a naval training ship moored off Rock Ferry Pier on the river Mersey. Founded in 1859 by the Mercantile Marine Service Association as a means of training seaman for the Merchant Navy, HMS Conway, during Martin’s time at the school, was actually the former Rodney-class ship HMS Nile. She was a full-rigged wooden battleship, with a beam of 54ft 5in and 205ft 6in long at the gun deck, and was home to about 250 cadets at any one time.

National School Admission Registers & Log-books 1870-1914, School name: HMS Conway training ship,
Archive reference D/CON/13/12, Liverpool Maritime Museum


Though it would have been a very different life from farming, Martin seems to have excelled as a seaman cadet, receiving more comments of ‘very good’ than just ‘good’ in his training record book. The cadets would have been excited in July 1899 by the visit of the Duke of York, later King George V, who presented prizes to the top cadets and delivered a speech on the qualities essential to success in seamanship, ‘truthfulness, obedience and zeal’. Sadly for Martin, 1999 was also tainted with personal tragedy, as his mother Sallie died in March that year, in Winterton, aged just 48.

Martin graduated from HMS Conway in July 1900 and must immediately have gone to sea, as he was not in England when the 1901 census was taken on 31 March. I have only been able to find the name of one ship Martin served on, though I do know that by the end of 1903, he was qualified to serve as a Second Mate on a foreign-going ship, as witnessed by these two Certificates of Competency dated 29 December 1903 and 3 July 1907.


In May 1907 Martin is shown sailing, as a passenger rather than crew, on the Mary Isabel from Hokianga in New Zealand to Sydney, Australia. Perhaps he had been visiting members of his extended family, who were then living in Auckland, before beginning his next posting.

Soon after reaching Sydney, Martin joined the crew of the Hartfield. She was an iron-hulled British sailing ship, 261.7ft long and 39.3ft wide, with a gross tonnage of 1866.5 tons. Built in 1884 in Whitehaven, in the English county of Cumberland, the Hartfield had been thoroughly overhauled while in London during December 1906-January 1907 and was classed A1 by Lloyd’s. In January 1907 she left London bound for Sydney, carrying a general cargo, then loaded a cargo of coal and sailed for Valparaiso, in Chile, where she arrived about 21 August 1907 after a very stormy passage. The coal was discharged in Valparaiso and the Hartfield then took on 1030 tons of sand ballast in preparation for a voyage to Tacoma, Washington, where a cargo of wheat awaited her.

Hartfield. Image courtesy of San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library, www.sfpl.org/sfphotos

The Hartfield departed Valparaiso for Tacoma on 25 October 1907 with a crew of 22, including Second Mate Martin Bust, and was never seen again.

The only clues as to the fate of the ship came from the lighthouse keeper at St Estevan Point on Vancouver Island, off the west coast of Canada. In a letter to the Agent of the Marine and Fisheries Department he reported that  

when he was at Hesquiat on 22nd December, 1907, he began a search along the coast and continued it up to the 6th January, 1908. He had found two life belts, some hardwood cabin fittings, and a miniature life buoy, upon which latter appeared the words "Hartfield," Liverpool. Beyond this there is nothing to show what became of this vessel. At the time this man wrote it had been blowing a hurricane from the south and south-west, so whether she was blown on shore or whether the cargo shifted and she capsized there is no evidence.

The loss of the ship was widely reported in newspapers around the world in January 1908 and that may be how Martin’s family came to know of his death. He was just 23 years of age. 

I imagine it was his sister Millicent who was most saddened by his loss and it was probably she who arranged for the commemorative plaque that can still be found on the wall of the south aisle in All Saints' Church, in Martin’s home town of Winterton. It reads simply, ‘In memory of Martin Hodgetts Bust. Born August 9 1884. Lost at sea December 1907.’ 

Left: All Saints' Church, Winterton. Image by David Wright. Licensed under public domain via Wikimedia Commons: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_Saints_Church_Winterton.jpg. Right: Image from church website: lincoln.ourchurchweb.org.uk/winterton


19 May 2015

Auckland sculpture: Birds and Boats

New Zealand is famous for its birds. Not only is it known by ornithologists as the seabird capital of the world, it is also home to many forest birds that are unique to this island nation because of its lengthy period of isolation from the world’s other continental land masses.

Being an island nation, New Zealand is also a boatie’s paradise. Before aeroplanes, shipping was the only means of connection with the rest of the world and, indeed, in the early days of the colony, the only method of transport around the country. These days, shipping remains an important industry, and pleasure boating has become one of our favourite pastimes.

It should come as no surprise, then, that both birds and boats provide important inspiration for New Zealand artists and craftspeople and, as I’ve walked the streets of its biggest city, Auckland, I’ve discovered several magnificent examples of this inspiration. 


Neil Dawson, Birds and Boats, 2013   
Appropriately titled, Birds and Boats, Neil Dawson’s circular sculpture is suspended from a marble wall in the foyer of the ANZ Tower in lower Albert Street, in central city Auckland. My photos give no indication of size but, at 3100mm x 3100mm x 600mm and made of painted steel, it’s a substantial piece and has presence. If you look closely, you can see that the sculpture is made of small origami-like sailboats and its curved shapes are reminiscent of ocean waves.


Greer Twiss, Graftings, 2004 
These are just three of the ten bronze pieces that make up Greer Twiss’s work, Graftings. They fit perfectly into their surroundings in the lush fernery behind the massive glasshouses of the Wintergardens in Auckland Domain. At first glance, they look like real birds, easily recognisable to New Zealanders by their characteristic silhouettes and, for the benefit of overseas visitors, they come with tags inscribed with their common, Latin and Maori names.


Fred Graham, Kaitiaki, 2004
Fred Graham’s massive artwork (above) is also to be found in Auckland Domain, perched shoulder to shoulder with the trees planted on the hillside behind the museum. Although made of steel plate and presumably weighing a ton, its graceful fluid lines make it look as if this gigantic hawk really could fly. The artist notes that birds ‘were the original Tangata Whenua of Aotearoa, and the hawk has figured prominently in the oral traditions of Ngati Whatua and Tainui’. Whether intentional or coincidental, from a certain angle the hawk looks like its about to attack Auckland’s iconic Sky Tower

Brett Graham, Manu Tawhiowhio, 1996
Fred Graham’s son is also a hugely talented sculptor, as witnessed by this large abstract bird (right) that sits outside a building at Auckland University of Technology. Seven metres high and made of copper, wood and river stones, this bird speaks to the way ancient seafarers used migrating birds to guide them to foreign lands. Brett Graham’s skill lies in his ability to use simple forms and natural materials to create extremely powerful works of art.  

Paul Dibble, Waiting for Godot, 2013
The statue at the corner of Wellesley and Kitchener Streets appears continually to change. At first, Paul Dibble’s sculpture of a kereru (native wood pigeon), Woodpigeon on a Circle, was placed in this spot by the folks from the Gow Langsford Gallery to celebrate an exhibition by the artist in 2010. Later, it morphed into Waiting for Godot, (below left) a 2013 bronze of a kereru and an extinct huia. The first sculpture was almost 2.5 metres tall, the second one almost 3.7 metres high. Now both have disappeared. I guess we’ll have to wait for the next Paul Dibble exhibition at the Gow Langsford to see what bird will appear next.  


Paul Dibble, Voyager, 2002
The Voyager (above right) is another stunning piece by master sculptor Paul Dibble. Made of cast patinated bronze in November 2002, this piece sits outside Viaduct Point, at 125 Customs Street West in the central city. Its plaque reads ‘The Voyager acknowledges New Zealand’s long and on-going association with the sea. It stands at a site where fish were unloaded from trawlers for city processing.’


Charlotte Fisher, Arc, 2004
We’ve headed back to Auckland Domain again to check out CharlotteFisher’s contribution to our birds and boats theme. Sitting atop a tall column of granite, its wide bronze arc, a shape synonymous with boats, holds seven vertical shapes – seamen, perhaps? Or immigrants? It is an appropriate symbol for the voyages made by early explorers and settlers immigrating to these fertile shores.


Louise Purvis, Promise Boat, 2005
A short walk down the Centennial Walkway from Fisher’s artwork is Louise Purvis’s bardiglio marble and basalt piece, Promise Boat.  Stone and metal are this sculptor’s preferred materials and she manipulates them into delicate shapes that belie their weight and density. Here, Purvis acknowledges and celebrates the fact that ‘Images of boats are powerful signifiers for island nations, especially for Aotearoa New Zealand, where the land was discovered and rediscovered by many different navigators’.  


Artist unknown, Teddy Bear and Boat
Let’s finish on a whimsical note. This charming piece sits outside the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron’s offices at Westhaven Marina, and was commissioned by the family of Lawrence D. Nathan (1919-1987) to recognise his contribution as a successful businessman, a civic leader, a generous philanthropist and a passionate sailor. As a piece on the Distinctly Devonport website explains, Nathan ‘owned three classic yachts, Kotere, Iorangi and … Kahurangi (A30) which he owned for over thirty years and eventually sailed around the world’, hence the model boat with A30 on its sail. Nathan also had ‘a bit of a thing for teddy bears’, apparently. It’s a fun piece that kids young and old can enjoy and a delightful way to commemorate one Aucklander’s love of boats and the sea.

17 May 2015

Auckland street art: All Fresco 2015

This time last year I blogged about Auckland’s vibrant street art festival, All Fresco 2014, a superb initiative by the K Road Business Association, which is working hard to cultivate the fringe culture and creativity that Auckland’s Karangahape Road is famous for. All Fresco’s aim is to inject colour into our streetscape and activate our shared spaces’, and for the last three years they have achieved that aim brilliantly, with artworks of vibrant colour and inventive design.

Unfortunately, my return to New Zealand was a couple of weeks too late to see the live events at All Fresco 2015 but, last week, I took myself on a photowalk to check out the ten new additions to Auckland’s inner-city’s street art. The new sites are marked on the map below – I highly recommend you check them out.

1. Askew One  
This massive explosion of colour adorns a wall of the Mercury Lane carpark, facing onto Canada Street and the motorway. Askew One’s expertise in graphic design and photography, in graffiti and in conventional painting has made him a leading exponent of street art in the Pacific region. The environmental and economic issues facing the smaller island nations within Oceania are important to Askew One and he tries to raise the profile of these issues in his artwork. 

2. Berst  
Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to photograph this artwork as it has been painted over due to a ‘miscommunication with the billboard company’, according to a Facebook post on the All Fresco page.

Twenty-nine-year-old Berst is a student at the University of Auckland, with a Masters degree in Education already under his belt and a PhD underway. According to the All Fresco publicity material his art ‘explores the abstraction of letter shapes through colour and large scale painting but he also creates illustrative works influenced by Maori mythology’. I wish I’d seen his creation.

3. Jon Drypnz  
As you can tell from my photo (at left), Jon’s artwork is a little difficult to see clearly, painted as it is on the back side of a K Road building, right next to the motorway and behind a building site, hence the wire netting. The artist has been painting exterior walls like this one for 10 years, and is greatly influenced by his surroundings and his past experiences.

4. Haunt One
This is a massive and wonderfully vivid piece of art (below, left), and Haunt One is a true local, having been brought up in a converted warehouse on K Road that had a perfect view of some of the rather eclectic local advertising signage. There is so much to see in this artwork – each time I look at it I see some new element and, apparently, this is a common theme with Haunt One’s landscapes. Those who are lucky enough to own his paintings continue to discover new details in them years after their initial purchase.


Not far from Haunt One’s work, on the rear of another tall building, down a driveway that runs off Pitt Street, is Jeremy Shirley’s stunning contribution to All Fresco 2015 (above, right). Shirley’s talents are many and varied: he has been employed as an art tutor in the Department of Corrections and as an exhibition team leader at Waikato Museum in Hamilton. He has been a full-time artist for more than 20 years, and particularly enjoys painting large-scale artworks in open-air sites like this one. I particularly like how well the colours and patterns of his work align with the design and colour of the building his art adorns.



6. Owen Dippie  
This has to be my favourite piece from these ten new All Fresco 2015 works. The realism of this large-scale painting is truly astonishing and it will come as no surprise, I’m sure, that Dippie’s art is internationally renowned. In Tauranga, where he lives, Owen has been commissioned to produce a series of 15 huge artworks to adorn the walls of his city – three have been finished, the fourth will soon be underway. I recommend you take a look at the gallery on his website.








7. Xoë Hall 
Xoë Hall’s work (below) is a vibrant and fun piece that seems truly representative of K Road culture. She has a love for the sparkle of glitter, of ‘pop-surreal idols, drop outs and dreamers’ and loves adorning walls with her glistening murals.



8. Cinzah   
Located on a road-side wall at the K Road end of Ponsonby Road and with a series of frequently occupied car parks in front of it, this work was difficult to photograph so I’m posting two photographs to try to make the details more clear. A versatile New Zealand-based artist, Cinzah ‘Seekayem’ Merkens has exhibited in many countries around the world, including North America and Mexico, Japan, South East Asia and Australasia, and uses his work to examine ‘the interrelationship between man and nature, duality, mythology and story telling’.


9. Tanja Jade   
Sadly, I also missed seeing Tanja Jade’s piece for All Fresco 2015, this time because the artist (also known as Misery) decided to paint over her work in order to paint something she thought would work better. Last year she joined with Tom Tom to paint a huge work, a series of four kids enjoying summer fun in the water that you can still see in Poynton Terrace and, if you follow my blog, you may remember that she featured in one of my pieces about the 2014 Whittaker’s Big Egg Hunt. She is truly a multi-talented artist.

10. Erin Forsyth, Component, Trustme, Gasp
This last work (below) was a group collaboration by Erin Forsyth (her illustrative work has graced the pages of such publications as Lurve, Pulp and Black magazines), by Trustme (as well as street art, Ross Liew’s creative efforts range from streetwear fashion to graphics, and his work has been exhibited in New York), by Gasp  (whose adolescent rebellion led him to graffiti art and, through meeting his fellow artists, into street art as a way to channel his creativity), and by Component (whose artistic mediums include stencil canvas work, prints and tshirts, as well as street art). What a talented tam!