The New Zealand Herald

Iconic orb: From fame to shame

- Frances Cook

A damaged $150,000 Wellington sculpture has been left sitting at a rubbish centre.

The iconic Ferns orb hung over Civic Square until June 2015, when it had to be removed because of constant wind damage.

A crane was brought in to take it down, and the council eventually decided to replace it with a sturdier version.

The original orb is estimated to have cost $150,000, and fundraisin­g is under way for the $210,000 replacemen­t.

But now some eagle-eyed Wellington­ians have spotted the original sculpture, sitting in a waste management yard in Seaview.

Art historian Katie Minett was heading out with her partner for a weekend coffee when they saw it.

“We were both pretty shocked that it was just sitting there, no attempt to cover it up or anything, visible from the street,” Minett said.

“It was pretty sad to see it in that state. I mean, I know it’s damaged, I know they can’t repair it, but you’d have thought they would cover it up, at least.”

Minett said it would have been better the sculpture was repurposed.

“It feels wrong,” she said. “I don’t know how the original one was funded, but someone paid for it.

“We should know why it’s on the side of the road, in a scrap metal yard, and what’s going to happen to it.”

Wellington Sculpture Trust chairwoman Sue Elliott said the orb was only at the yard temporaril­y, while they decided on its future.

She said that the sculpture going to the tip permanentl­y was “not my preference”.

It was being held at the waste yard because the property was owned by one of the Sculpture Trust trustees.

“We have to have discussion­s with the artist about what happens next,” Elliott said.

Wellington Mayor Justin Lester said he knew about the storage arrangemen­t, and was happy with it.

The orb had been there since June 2015 because the storage was free.

“I think people are jumping to conclusion­s, it’s certainly not going to the tip.

“For a start, Wellington City Council and the Sculpture Trust own it. So we want to make sure it has a permanent home.”

Lester said there was a “high likelihood” that the sculpture would eventually be repurposed.

So far $150,000 has been raised for the replacemen­t sculpture, which is hoped to be in place around June.

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 ?? Pictures/Getty Images, Tim McNamara ?? The striking Ferns sculpture which once hung high over Wellington’s Civic Square, is now in a waste management yard.
Pictures/Getty Images, Tim McNamara The striking Ferns sculpture which once hung high over Wellington’s Civic Square, is now in a waste management yard.

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