Terry Stringer b. 1946
New Zealand Arrival, 2024
Bronze
88cm sculpture on 82cm plinth, 170cm overall
2025
Unique
Further images
A piece that tells an autobiographical story, this sculpture shows a hand enclosing the figure of a boy. After arriving in Wellington as four immigrants into New Zealand on the...
A piece that tells an autobiographical story, this sculpture shows a hand enclosing the figure of a boy.
After arriving in Wellington as four immigrants into New Zealand on the Dominion Monarch, my mother took my brother and myself into central Wellington shopping, ages six and five. It was at Mackenzie’s that I made a wrong turn and lost sight of the other two. My text echoes this breaking of a tight little family circle.
In my recent sculpture I have adopted found objects, which maintain their identity while surrounded by my modelling. That idea has carried over into this work where there are fingers holding both a lost and found object – which is myself when young.
Terry Stringer March 2026
After arriving in Wellington as four immigrants into New Zealand on the Dominion Monarch, my mother took my brother and myself into central Wellington shopping, ages six and five. It was at Mackenzie’s that I made a wrong turn and lost sight of the other two. My text echoes this breaking of a tight little family circle.
In my recent sculpture I have adopted found objects, which maintain their identity while surrounded by my modelling. That idea has carried over into this work where there are fingers holding both a lost and found object – which is myself when young.
Terry Stringer March 2026
