6/21/2023 0 Comments Vimr purpose![]() ![]() We can only ship artwork to residential addresses. Please note that it may be necessary to make an appointment with us for collection. Your order will be ready for collection on the next business day after you receive your order confirmation email. You are welcome to pick up any artwork that you have purchased from Purpose Gallery at our premises at 5 Iwa St, Māpua, Tasman District, New Zealand 7005. These are your responsibility and Purpose Gallery is not responsible for any such charges if they are applied. Your order may be subject to local import duties and taxes which are incurred once a shipment reaches your destination country. If you have not received your order within 30 days of receiving your shipping confirmation email, please contact us at with your name, order number and tracking number and we will look into it for you. Please allow 48 hours for the tracking number information to become available. ![]() You will receive another notification email letting you know when your order has shipped and this email will contain tracking information for your order. Please note that some heavy or very large items cannot be shipped and are pickup only. The cost of international shipping and for large artworks depends on size, weight and destination address. “Toi”, the general word for “art” in te reo Māori, can also mean “vine".Īll orders are processed within 1-3 working days (excluding weekends and New Zealand statutory holidays) after you receive your order confirmation email.įor international orders, or for large/bulky artworks within New Zealand, we will acknowledge your order within 1-3 working days and provide you with a separate invoice for shipping once we calculate the final cost. The journey undertaken in the making of the Vine is but a shadow of the story of the vine itself.įrom Andrew Wood (art expert and writer): "The Vine is both decoratively European with a hint of the colonial, including references to shipbuilding materials, and the aka of tradition and whakapapa. The inlay is a concoction and the middle is based on an old sailing ship recipe of melted kauri gum and spirits.įinally the work was burnt numerous times to achieve this effect of age and wear. The house was well over a hundred years old, as were the chisels used to carve it. The wood is old Kauri sarking that was recycled from a demolished house. The materials themselves have their own stories. It is about the essence of nature and nurture. This piece traveled with Paul around New Zealand and was hand carved on the beaches of the far north and at festivals, gatherings and hui around the country. A story of feeding your people (when food is eaten tapu is lifted and noa remains). An ancient adventure that predates the European historical record. Inspired by the history of the kumara and its journey around the world.
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