Taka Kabuati tickles the ivories. Watching on are, from left, RicoTurnbull, Te Puke High School art teacher Josephine McDougall and Te Puke library team leader Amanda-Jane McFadden
Taka Kabuati tickles the ivories. Watching on are, from left, RicoTurnbull, Te Puke High School art teacher Josephine McDougall and Te Puke library team leader Amanda-Jane McFadden
There are new keys at Te Puke Library — on one of the most colourful pianos you have ever seen.
The painted community piano will be stationed outside the library whenever weather permits, for passers-by and library visitors to have a tinkle.
Te Puke library team leader Amanda-Jane McFadden saysthe piano, which had been brought to the Bay from Dunedin and is over 100 years old, was donated to the library by a staff member.
"One of our staff members in the council had a piano to donate and asked if there was someone who wanted it," she says.
"Another, now former, staff member thought it would be great to have a community piano."
The design for the piano came from three Te Puke High School students, Te Mote Marsh, William Lawrence and Te Waka Davis.
"They brainstormed about what it meant to be from Te Puke and the things around Te Puke — which is where kiwifruit, fish and chips and the beach scene came from," says art teacher Josephine McDougall.
By the time painting began, the three designers had moved on from art classes, but the brushes were taken up by Taka Kabuati and Rico Turnbull who stepped in with Josephine's help, while Teimana (Des) Mohi enhanced and painted the beach scene.