MC Commission

 Saturday NZ’s client MC (formerly Meredith Connell), the Office of the Crown Solicitors, were moving into exciting new premises, one of only two Green Buildings in the country, and were commissioning six artists to present six prescribed elements of Contemporary Aotearoa.

Woodruffe was asked for an artwork that interpreted “Diversity, including ethnicity, linguistics, religion, sexuality, gender, sports and cultural interests, and social, economic, political and geopolitical outlook”, a responsibility he took seriously from his position as a Ngāti Pakeha man.

MC were thrilled with the result, a multi-panel work two metres high by five metres long.

In their catalogue, MC declared “Evan Woodruffe’s 2nd November 2021 expresses diversity as ten individual paintings, using bold and bright Schmincke Artist Colours, but connecting and functioning as one. The individual paintings can be reconfigured or be exchanged, symbolising the fluid dynamic of an ever-changing Aotearoa New Zealand. No human forms are shown for these would place limits on diversity. Instead, the work stimulates the viewer’s own imagination to explore the unlimited diversity of human experience. Connecting the ten works is a green ouroboros, also tattooed on Woodruffe’s arm, linking the artist permanently with the work while symbolising the infinite possibility of Aotearoa New Zealand as it grows and evolves”.

As well as paint, the artist used collage, with fabrics from around the world, and earth – whenua from Tairawhiti where Māori first met with Cook, and gold, the shiny earth that brought many early immigrants.

“I had the nine metre long wall painted a deep, warm blue so the work could float on it like our motu on the Pacific.”

Woodruffe’s commission rests in the Office HQ of the Crown Solicitor, alongside other fellow artists Israel Tangaroa Birch, Xoë Hall, Yuki Kihara, Mary-Louise Browne, and Michael Hight.

Photography courtesy of Artsdiary and Saturday.

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