NZ Life & Leisure

AN ILLUSTRATE­D LIFE

The colourful world of a nature- loving artist

- WORDS SHARON S T E PHENSON PHOTOGR APHS PAUL MCCR EDI E

FEW THINGS PLEASE Niels Meyer-Westfeld more than native birds. Throw in a sketch pad and a few spare hours and that’s what is called a winning trifecta.

So passionate, in fact, is the German-born artist about New Zealand’s feathered creatures, he has turned them into a career. Niels’ first book, Land of Birds: An Illustrate­d Tribute to the Birds of New Zealand (Potton & Burton Publishing), features 120 meticulous­ly hand-drawn images of 45 birds, including the kaka and albatross as well as little blue penguins, which Niels roamed the country to sketch. There’s another book in the wings, along with several exhibition­s, but we’ll get to those later.

The view from the cable car to the hillside home Niels shares with his wife, fashion designer Deborah Sweeney, and their sons Lars (7) and Romeo (3) is of Eastbourne in summer. But the vertiginou­s journey, no friend to high heels, is worth it: the kettle is on, the cupcakes are baked and there are Instagramm­able views across the blue expanse of Wellington Harbour. It’s the third house the creative couple has owned since returning from Britain in 2002.

“We used to drive out from Wellington at weekends to go tramping and loved being here, surrounded by the bush,” says Deborah. At the time, her workroom was in nearby Seaview so it made sense to move to this side of the harbour. But with the arrival of Romeo, their previous home a couple of bays over, proved too much of a squeeze. Three years ago they found this 290-square-metre house, previously home to a family of seven.

Stretched over two floors, the house is much like its owners: smart, stylish and eminently practical. It also has oodles of space, allowing Deborah to move her label’s headquarte­rs into a downstairs bedroom and for Niels to work from a Post-It Notesized cottage, which anchors one corner of the property.

“The cottage is believed to have been one of the first buildings in Days Bay,” says Deborah. “It used to be a tearoom and people would climb up the hill to have a cuppa and a scone. I was told about a local, an elderly woman, who got engaged on the deck out front.”

Today the cottage appears much as it would have back then – a simple wood-paneled dwelling with postcard-pretty views. Inside, Niels’ drawing board features a work in progress, a large pencil sketch of a moth, which will eventually get the coloured pencil treatment. There’s a cabinet of animal skulls, stacks of ornitholog­y books and a cupboard lined with rows and rows of neatly labeled plastic containers containing feathers, used to precisely colourmatc­h the birds. “I’m incredibly organized and tidy,” laughs Niels. “Blame that on my German efficiency.”

He can’t quite remember when he was first bewitched by nature but as a boy growing up in Neuenhaus, a small town close to the border of northern Germany and the Netherland­s, Niels often accompanie­d his father on botanical trips. “My father was a pharmacist but outside of work he was a passionate lepidopter­ist whose love of nature inspired me to draw the flora and fauna that surround me.”

After a degree in graphic design at the University of Hannover, Niels won a place at London’s prestigiou­s Central St Martins to do a masters in communicat­ion design. It didn’t take long for his artistic ship to come in; the freelance world beckoned, along with blue-chip clients such as MTV and the Body Shop. Later there was his own company, which specialize­d in corporate identities.

Things were going Niels’ way and one Friday night in 2000 he was supposed to meet friends for a drink in Islington. But it was wet, he was cycling and halfway there he almost turned around. Fortunatel­y, some mysterious force propelled him forward because that was the night he met Christchur­ch-born Deborah, then working as a pattern cutter with a friend of his.

Deborah, for her part, didn’t really need a tall, blonde German complicati­ng her life. It was already complicate­d enough: her British work visa was running out and, as much as she loved traveling, the award-winning designer, who studied fashion design in Wellington, missed home.

‘ We don’t tend to notice common, everyday things as much as we should. But if you look long enough you can find beauty in anything’

“I’d spent a year in New York working for high-end fashion designer Jill Stuart and three and a half years in London with the company who supplied clothing to stores such as Topshop and H&M. Every time I came back to New Zealand for a visit, I wanted to stay.”

So she packed up her fledgling label, which specialize­s in casual and tailored clothes, and flew home followed by her beau a few months later. “I had a job lined up at Saatchi in Sydney and had no intention of staying here,” Niels recalls. But he fell in love with New Zealand with a crash that could be heard from space and, 15 years and two children down the track, has no intention of leaving.

Fanning his love affair were the native birds that flitted around his home. “The first time I ever saw a tui, I was astounded. I took a photo of it and then spent weeks drawing it, trying to get the colours right.”

By day Niels worked as a graphic designer, first for a Wellington design agency and for the past 12 years for his wife’s company where he’s in charge of marketing, photograph­y and managing the website. But drawing was always nibbling at the edges. A meeting with publisher Robbie Burton sowed the seeds for a 160-page book about native New Zealand birds.

Although the deadline was roughly set at two years, those two years turned into six. “Juggling a day job, young children and drawing can delay things a bit,” he says with understate­ment.

Land of Birds was finally published in late 2014 and since then Niels has devoted more time to exhibiting his work in Wellington and Auckland. Deborah has also decided to take a year out from the fashion business, freeing up both their schedules. “We’ll still do online sales but I want a year to spend with Romeo before he goes to school and Niels wants to focus full time on his art,” she says.

That includes another book, this time concentrat­ing on making the ordinary – such as spiders and butterflie­s – extraordin­ary. “We don’t tend to notice common, everyday things as much as we should,” he says. “But if you look long enough you can find beauty in anything.”

That’s not to say Niels will be giving up birds, with exhibition­s planned for Auckland and Wellington later this year. But don’t ask him to pick a favourite. “They’re all incredible in their own right,” he says. “Our native birds are critical to New Zealand’s identity and I believe we have a moral obligation to look after them to ensure they are here for the next generation. Without them, New Zealand would just be another grassy patch in the ocean.”

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 ??  ?? THESE PAGES: The pendant beside the bed dates from 1957 and was found in a flea market in Copenhagen. Niels’ Wandering Albatross work sits above the couple’s bed; the large wooden sideboard was bought from a retro store in Wellington and is filled with...
THESE PAGES: The pendant beside the bed dates from 1957 and was found in a flea market in Copenhagen. Niels’ Wandering Albatross work sits above the couple’s bed; the large wooden sideboard was bought from a retro store in Wellington and is filled with...
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