Skip to Content

Nga Huruhuru Rangatira, "the feathers of the chief", forms a 6.4-metre high archway framing a view of the long-standing statue of Te Peeti Te Awe Awe. It stands on the corner of The Square and Church Street, and is illuminated at night. The stylised giant huia feathers are the creation of Massey University Professor of Māori Visual Arts Robert Jahnke. Crafted from 3000 kilograms of ground stainless steel, it features three feathers on one side, and two on the other, representing a coming together of Māori cultural references and Western knowledge. Cutaway sections on the columns are in the shape of huia. The work is the ninth $100,000 sculpture the trust and the Council have paid for.

Identification

Object type
Image
Date
December 11, 2016
Digitisation ID
2016P_IMCA-DigitalArchive_013395
Format
Born Digital
Held In
IMCA Digital Archive

Related items

Nga Huruhuru Rangatira public sculpture
Nga Huruhuru Rangatira public sculpture
Nga Huruhuru Rangatira public sculpture
Sculpture: Body Language - Spirit of Place
All Creatures Great sculpture wrapped for protection during Central Library refurbishment
Nga Huruhuru Rangatira public sculpture (detail)
Ko Ihakara Tukumaru
Art treasure found in Manawatu?
Cuba Street Reeds in the dawn
Arts Trail Guide - Palmerston North City Centre
Wiremu Kingi Te Awe Awe
Dominion Conference of Māori Welfare League Begins

Creation

Created By
Place
The Square, Palmerston North

Object rights

Taxonomy

Tags
2010s,
art work,
city feature,
huia feathers,
public sculpture,
te ao māori,
Community Tags
toi,

Report a problem

Related items

Nga Huruhuru Rangatira public sculpture
Nga Huruhuru Rangatira public sculpture
Nga Huruhuru Rangatira public sculpture
Sculpture: Body Language - Spirit of Place
All Creatures Great sculpture wrapped for protection during Central Library refurbishment
Nga Huruhuru Rangatira public sculpture (detail)
Ko Ihakara Tukumaru
Art treasure found in Manawatu?
Cuba Street Reeds in the dawn
Arts Trail Guide - Palmerston North City Centre
Wiremu Kingi Te Awe Awe
Dominion Conference of Māori Welfare League Begins