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Home / Whanganui Chronicle

Sisters' portrait a winner

Whanganui Chronicle
24 Feb, 2016 07:24 PM3 mins to read

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SISTERS: Inahaa Te Urutahi Waikerepuru, Te Rawanake Robinson-Coles and Ria Wihapi-Waikerepuru with artist Andre Bronnimann and the painting which has just won a $20,000 award.

SISTERS: Inahaa Te Urutahi Waikerepuru, Te Rawanake Robinson-Coles and Ria Wihapi-Waikerepuru with artist Andre Bronnimann and the painting which has just won a $20,000 award.

A chance meeting on a street has lead to a prestigious art award worth $20,000 for Whanganui artist Andre Bronnimann.

Mr Bronnimann is the 2016 winner of the Adam Portraiture Award, hosted by the New Zealand Portrait Gallery, with his striking work, Sisters.

The painting features three Taranaki women: Te Rawanake Robinson-Coles of Hawera, Inahaa Te Urutahi Waikerepuru of Waitara, and Ria Wihapi-Waikerepuru, originally from Hawera but now living in Otaki.

Mr Bronnimann said he was driving down Victoria Ave more than two years ago when he spotted Ms Robinson-Coles having lunch at a cafe with her husband.

The portrait took around two years to complete. Photo / Suppled
The portrait took around two years to complete. Photo / Suppled
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"Whenever I see a Maori with a moko and an interesting face, I stop them and ask if I can paint their portrait," Mr Bronnimann said.

"I give them my business card and point them to my website so they know I'm serious."

Ms Robinson-Coles agreed to have her portrait painted, along with her sisters.

Mr Bronnimann said the portrait started with a photo shoot by photographer Albert Sword. It then took Mr Bronnimann around two years to complete the portrait - 412 hours in total. The portrait is made of oil on linen and measures 183cm wide by 122cm high.

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This is the fourth time Mr Bronnimann has entered the awards. When the gallery phoned him to tell him he'd won he "thought the woman was joking".

"To say I'm pleased is something of an understatement," Mr Bronnimann said.

He intends to spend his $20,000 on a trip to Europe to see his parents and to visit the Meisel Gallery in New York.

Ms Waikerepuru said Mr Bronnimann had invited the three of them for a viewing of the portrait around two weeks ago.

"We were blown away. We're so appreciate of how he's captured our wairua [spirit] and our essence as wahine Maori."

Ms Waikerepuru said the three were "geneologically linked" and considered themselves to be sisters. They have strong iwi connections to Te Atiawa, Taranaki Tukau, Tangahoe, Nga Ruahine, Ngati Ruanui, and Nga Rauru.

"We are all great-grandmothers and have worked at varying levels supporting whanau, hapu and marae social, cultural and economic development within our tribal areas for about 30 years, while also pursuing our own individual creative endeavours that include performing ceremonial rituals and traditional and contemporary weaving."

Mr Bronnimann, Ms Robinson-Coles, Ms Waikerepuru and Ms Wihapi-Waikerepuru travelled to Wellington for last night's awards ceremony.

Ms Waikerepuru said she had been looking forward to the event.

"We're very happy the painting has won this award. For it to be shared and appreciated by a wide group is wonderful.

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"We are honoured to be standing with Andre," she said.

+ See more of Andre Bronnimann's work at www.andrebronnimann.com or www.facebook.com/BronnimannArt.

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