As a humane expression of architecture Futuna is perfectly adaptable to interdenominational use, and it embodies in three-dimensional form the values of the Treaty of Waitangi – perhaps the only building in our culture to do so. To experience it on a fine summer’s day, when light intensities move the building, is to sense the rhythm of our homecoming, the where and what of our turangawaewae as New Zealanders.
—Russell Walden
Since its grand opening in 1961,
Wellington’s Futuna Chapel – devised by architect John Scott and artist Jim
Allen – has held a singular place in New Zealand’s cultural history. Futuna:
Life of a Building
tells the remarkable story of the chapel’s inception and construction, and its
status beyond as well as within the architectural world. The book also tells
the vexed story of the chapel’s sale to a developer in 2001 and its subsequent
dereliction and, at the eleventh hour, rescue. Since then, the chapel has been
transformed from a place of Catholic worship to a non-denominational centre for
spiritual, cultural and artistic expression. With essays by Chris Cochran,
David Mitchell, Niall McLaughlin, Gregory O’Brien and Nick Bevin and
photographs by Paul McCredie and Gavin Woodward, this book takes us into the
heart of one of the most dynamic and affecting human-made structures in
Oceania.
About the editors:
NICK BEVIN is the director of
Wellington-based Bevin + Slessor Architects, whose contemporary buildings in
urban, coastal and rural spaces across New Zealand have won numerous awards. He
is a fellow of the New Zealand Institute of Architects, and from 2010 he has
been Chair of the Friends of the Futuna Charitable Trust.
GREGORY
O’BRIEN is
the Stout Memorial Fellow at Victoria University of Wellington for 2015–16.
Between 1997 and 2009 he was a curator at City Gallery Wellington, where his
projects included exhibitions by Ralph Hotere, Rosalie Gascoigne, Laurence
Aberhart and emigre architect Ernst Plischke. Recent publications include the
poetry collection Whale Years and See
What I Can See: New Zealand Photography for the Young and Curious (both AUP, 2015).
Futuna: Life of a Building
Hardback $50 - Victoria University PressPublication date: 14 July 2016
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