Ana Iti, Whakaruruhau, 2024
Aluminium and shade cloth. Thanks to INEX Metals Ltd and Total Fabrication & Welding.
The kahukura, an endemic butterfly, lays its eggs in the leaves of the ongaonga, a native stinging nettle. Small spikes cover the ongaonga’s stem and a line forms on the midrib of its leaves. As a fortress against predatory mammals and birds, it offers a sanctuary for kahukura and their larvae. Ana Iti’s Whakaruruhau recalls both the plant’s leaves and the butterfly’s wings. Made of gardeners’ shade cloth tensioned across metal frames, it creates a small space of shelter, like the ongaonga. It emphasises the symbiotic relationship that has evolved between creature and plant over centuries. Presented in the landscape, it situates this relationship within a larger, interconnected ecosystem, made up of many such exchanges.
