Nelson City Centre ArtWalk

Make/Shift Spaces and The Suter Art Gallery Te Aratoi o Whakatū

ArtWalk Nelson takes you around art installations in central Nelson.
Many thanks to all the property owners and tenants for being part of ArtWalk.

The Suter Art Gallery

Te Aratoi o Whakatū

208 Bridge Street

Begin or end your ArtWalk (or take a mid-Walk break) at The Suter. Their ever-changing exhibitions often include one or more of the ArtWalk paintings.

William Allen

Nelson Landscape

Corner of New Street & Halstead Street

William Allen had a strong influence on New Zealand artists in the Modernist movement, as well as being Art Master at Nelson College.

Rita Angus

The Apple Pickers

163 Bridge Street (Fresh Choice)

Painted in 1944, Rita Angus' The Apple Pickers is one of those rare art works that seems timeless – it could just as easily have been painted in the 2020's.

Leo Bensemann

After Rain, Takaka

1 Montgomery Square (between Hardy St & Montgomery Sq)

Leo Bensemann has painted a ‘portrait’ of Tākaka Hill with its weather-sculpted rocks scattered over its summit.

Leo Bensemann

Self Portrait

69 Collingwood Street (Fresh Choice)

In what is possibly his last self-portrait, Leo Bensemann has placed himself against a Golden Bay landscape, a place that meant a great deal to him.

Jane Evans

Ladies Day

171 Trafalgar Street (next to Taking Shape Ladies Fashion)

Jane Evans' Ladies Day captures a day on the green, with one woman focused on her putting, another being the imperious observer, and then the chatterer, with her back to us.

Jane Evans

Saturday Afternoon I

15 Bridge Street (actually on Haven Rd, past Red Gallery)

Jane Evans has captured a quintessential Nelson scene: a Saturday afternoon yacht race on Nelson Harbour.

Jane Evans

Summer Siesta

Fiddle Lane (next to Nelson Day Spa at 86 Bridge Street)

Jane Evans' reclining woman, languidly at rest in the heat of the day, was deemed too distracting for the intended boardroom location.

John Gully

Western Coast of Tasman Bay

8 New Street

If there were ever an artwork intended to ‘sell’ New Zealand in the 1880s and celebrate the picturesque beauty of the Nelson region, then it's John Gully's Western Coast of Tasman Bay.

Bill Hammond

All Along the Heaphy Highway

27 Halifax Street (Nelson Library, facing Riverside Pop-Up Park)

Bill Hammond’s surrealist landscape is about the controversy surrounding building a road to connect the top of the West Coast with the Nelson region, using the Heaphy Track.

Laura Herford

The Little Emigrant

27 Halifax Street (Elma Turner Nelson Library)

Laura Herford has captured a little emigrant girl on her way to Nelson, looking out over the ocean and dreaming of home.

Irvine Major

At the Slip

168 Trafalgar Street (Westpac Bank carpark)

Nelson’s port and marina provided Irvine Major with a wealth of interesting subject matter – including these colourful vessels on the slipway.

Irvine Major

Summer in Nelson

56 Buxton Square (on the back wall of Farmers)

Irvine Major nailed the ‘essence of Nelson’ when he painted this picture, if the sales of postcards bearing this image are anything to go by.

Irvine Major

Tidal Stream I

15 Bridge Street (Nelson Mail)

Irvine Major created many artworks inspired by the coastline from Tōtaranui to Stephens Bay near Kaiteriteri, where the artist’s family had a bach.

Ross Ritchie

Still Life With Mullet

105 Montgomery Sq (Harry's Fish Shop)

Ross Ritchie has done a painting within a painting, but with a very peculiar fish that is out of proportion with either scene.

Charlotte Sadd

Rocks Road in the making

113 Hardy Street (Untouchable Hair)

Charlotte Sadd's Rocks Road in the making shows the construction of one of Nelson's signature stretches of road, which was officially opened in February 1899.

Cedric Savage

Aftermath

79 Rutherford Street (next to Chokdee Restaurant)

Cedric Savage's Aftermath is probably a compilation of different aspects of Golden Bay, with Tata Island perhaps, in the middle distance.

Robin Slow

Aratoi

15 Bridge Street (Nelson Mail)

This painting refers to the Māori name for The Suter Art Gallery: Te Aratoi o Whakatū. Ara is pathway. Toi relates to art and knowledge. Te Aratoi o Whakatū: the pathway to art in Nelson.

Robin Slow

Kōkōwai

43 Montgomery Square (near the bike stand)

Robin Slow's painting depicts the origins of kōkōwai, a stone that is ground to make a red ochre pigment, and which, when applied, can denote tapu (sacredness).

Michael Smither

Boy and Dolphin

75 Rutherford Street (at the rear of Bed Bath & Beyond)

Michael Smither researched and painted a series of humans with a dolphin after being commissioned to do a cover image for Maurice Shadbolt’s novel This Summer’s Dolphin.

Brian Strong

Lake Series 10, Rotoiti

93 Montgomery Square (next to Robert Harris Cafe)

Brian Strong's Lake Series 10, Rotoiti is painted from a high viewpoint, capturing the dramatic scale of the Nelson Lakes landscape.

Toss Woollaston

From Spooners Range

105 Montgomery Square (Pomeroys Coffee & Tea)

Many of Toss Woollaston’s landscapes are from a high vantage point, embracing more than the eye can see in one glance. From Spooners Range depicts the spectacular view looking towards Tasman Bay.

Toss Woollaston

Kiln near Riwaka

227 Hardy Street (next to Harcourts Real Estate)

Toss Woollaston painted the landscapes he knew and the people around him over and over again, including this hop kiln on the way to Golden Bay.

Toss Woollaston

View from Takaka Hill

23 Wakatu Lane (behind the Suburban Bus Station)

Sometimes an artwork affects how you look at a landscape. Once you have seen this painting, it might change the way you regard the view from the top of Tākaka Hill looking towards Motueka.