Watch this space - Wellington's famed tape artists will be transforming the wall of FreshChoice supermarket during the Greytown Arts Festival.
"We are given the freedom to transform urban spaces. So few people get to do that," artist Erica Duthie says.
Fellow artist Struan Ashby says: "We draw with tape, we make murals out of masking tape. It's a performance piece, and we invite the public to come and be drawn by us."
The pair are well-known for their installation on the side of Te Papa Museum during the Rugby World Cup last year, and have developed hundreds of temporary murals around the world.
"We're both fine arts majors, and came away wishing we could be involved with art-making that could be more hands-on than the fine art we had been taught to make," said Ms Duthie.
They started working with tape in the early'90s, and in collaboration with American Michael Townsend, realised after a while they had created a new art form.
But the art form is not just about the material they use - the performance, the process and the interaction with the audience are equally important.
"You go into a museum and look at a project, but it's a different relationship being allowed to be a part of the process," said Ms Duthie.
"[W]e can say 'do you have any ideas? ... they literally get woven into it."
The pair say they are not sure what will be going up on the FreshChoice wall, but they have the Greytown Arts Festival theme, The Last Piece, in mind and are ready to be inspired by passers-by.
Ms Duthie and Mr Ashby will be putting the mural up on the Saturday and Sunday of the festival, and the public is invited to come and pull off the tape on Monday at 1pm.
"It's a chance to constructively be a part of a destructive process," said Ms Duthie.