• Renowned local artist completes educational mural for rural school

Renowned local artist completes educational mural for rural school

Hawkes Bay artist Stan Mans recently completed a new mural at rural Pākōwhai School, titled WE'RE MORE THAN JUST APPLES.

Pākōwhai School was one of ten winners in this year's Keep New Zealand Beautiful Resene Wall Worthy Competition, which gives youth groups, schools and ECEs from across the country the opportunity to paint a mural with an environmental theme or message, to help beautify an area in their local community.

The school commissioned renowned artist Stan Mans to capture both the story and history of the area, with the name of the artwork reflecting the school's desire to educate their tamariki on the interconnectedness of nature.

Teacher, Kelly Eyles, says 

"Now the area is full of orchards and farmland, and our rural school which needs the environment to be looked after and cared for by each new generation," says Kelly Eyles, teacher at the school.

Pākōwhai School, with a roll of just 28 students, has a deep history in the area.

A focus of the school, as shown through the mural, is around encouraging bee populations and educating children on the importance bees play in our ecosystem.

Ms. Eyles says that, in the near future, Pākōwhai School aims to plant a garden full of the plants that are essential to bees.

The school already has a vegetable garden that is tended by parents, staff and children, and the research for the design of the mural has encouraged the planting of a garden solely for bees, complete with flowers that specifically attract them and encourage them to help pollinate the area.

The mural is located on a stand-alone wall in the centre of the school in Chesterthorpe Road, Pākōwhai and is freely visible to students and visitors.

 

 

About the Resene Wall Worthy Competition
Keep New Zealand Beautiful's Resene Wall Worthy Competition is part of the organisation's Paint New Zealand Beautiful programme, and gives early childhood centres, schools and youth groups the chance to tell their local history, celebrate a local hero or communicate a nature or conservation theme via a mural on a wall in their community. The competition helps teach children the importance of Keeping New Zealand Beautiful by getting them involved in creating the design and helping bring it to life.

From all the submissions received, 15 designs were chosen as finalists for their strong and creative environmental message and the enhancement they would make to the local community. These submissions were then put to a public vote via social media to determine the top ten murals, with winning submissions receiving a $750 Resene paint voucher, drop cloth and high vis vests, as well a $500 donation if the mural is completed by the end of the 2022 school year.

Keep New Zealand Beautiful CEO Heather Saunderson, says: "Our Resene Wall Worthy Competition provides a great opportunity for early childhood centres, schools and youth groups to celebrate a local hero, to tell a story about their local area or communicate a conservation theme. As always, we were blown away by the calibre of entries, and by the participation in the voting by the public with over 4,500 votes cast via our website and social media. We're so excited to see these murals come to life, knowing how the beautification of public spaces greatly benefits communities by increasing civic pride."

The ten winning schools and their regions are listed below, with their designs visible on the Keep New Zealand Beautiful website.
Ashgrove School, Rangiora with Tūrangawaewae Our Place to Stand
Craighead Diocesan School, Timaru with Ko au te whenua, ko te whenua, ko au (I am the land and the land is me)
Dot Kids, Greytown with Our tamariki, our turangawaewae
Manchester Street School, Feilding with Be Kind to Papatuanuku
Martinborough Playcentre, Martinborough with Te Whanau Tupu ngatahi
Pakowhai School, Napier with We’re More Than Just Apples
Rangiora Playcentre with Nature’s Playground
Rototuna Senior High School, Hamilton with Kotahitanga
Taranaki Diocesan School for Girls with Te Kura Pi’opatanga o W’akaa’urangi
Woodend School, Waimakariri with Woodend School Cultural Narrative

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