Horowhenua Chronicle

Chorus box goes from drab to fab

Cabinet on Foxton’s Main St gets a colourful facelift

- Paul Williams

More streetside telecommun­ication boxes in Horowhenua are being turned into works of art. The latest mural, by Foxton artist Sonja Hart, gave a drab old grey box on Foxton’s Main St a facelift, and three more boxes will be painted at various locations soon.

The Chorus cabinet art initiative began in 2010 with a test pilot in Auckland in an effort to reduce vandalism of the telecommun­ications cabinets. It proved successful so it was extended throughout the country, with an average of 170 murals each year.

There are more than 11,000 telecommun­ications cabinets in New Zealand.

Artists were compensate­d for the materials used and their time, paid anywhere from $600 to $1700 depending on the size of the cabinet.

Hart’s work features an abstract interpreta­tion of Horowhenua using vibrant colours to capture the beautiful landscape.

She gained inspiratio­n for her design while helping her elderly relatives on Denman Island in Canada with their organic garden.

“This artwork is called Lay of the Land and is my abstract interpreta­tion of Horowhenua . . . the sky, the ranges, the river/awa, the estuary and the ocean/moana. The ebb and flow and rhythm of our whenua,” she said.

Horowhenua District Council was

supporting Chorus in the Cabinet Art programme. Mayor Bernie Wanden said it gave artists a chance to showcase their talents to the local community.

“We always look forward to partnering with Chorus through their Cabinet Art programme and this year we’re happy to say that, once again, we received high-quality designs,” he said.

Designs chosen for this year’s murals include a colourful illustrati­on of the Ma¯ori creation story of Ranginui and Papatu¯a¯nuku, a Ma¯ori Pasifika pattern design, a Kiwi bird and teddy bear sitting near the SPCA centre, and a fantail nestled in ferns.

Chorus said the partnershi­p with Horowhenua District Council had

been a success.

Community relations manager Jo Seddon said the collaborat­ion with the council helped local artists to bring artwork to the community.

“Our ongoing partnershi­p helps us to work with more local artists and bring their creativity to life,” she said.

 ?? ?? Foxton artist Sonja Hart’s mural on the telecommun­ications box on Main St.
Foxton artist Sonja Hart’s mural on the telecommun­ications box on Main St.
 ?? ?? The old Chorus box in Foxton prior before artist Sonja Hart got to it.
The old Chorus box in Foxton prior before artist Sonja Hart got to it.
 ?? ?? Foxton artist Sonja Hart.
Foxton artist Sonja Hart.

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