The strange and beautiful Nikau palm is the southernmost growing of all the palms, and is endemic to New Zealand. I love its strong shape and its dense, angular top.
The palm is intrinsically of great appeal to artists, both for its shape and its associations, and appears in the works of many New Zealand painters. This is by Jenny Bennett:
The tree grows to heights of 10 metres. The single stem (it's very rare for there to be more than one, or for there to be side branches) is marked with rings left by the marks of leaves which have fallen.
The leaves are about 1 to 3 metres long, and were used by the Māori in building. The top of the stem is fleshy and juicy and was (is?) sometimes eaten.
Here is another one of Jenny's paintings: (see www.jennybennett.com)
This is a different interpretation - by Sandi O'Neill (see www.newzealand-artist.co.nz)
To me the Nikau is a strong symbol of home. Beautiful New Zealand, with its beaches, its forests, its magnetic pull when I'm away. Summer, sea, sand..... my idea of happiness
Thursday, August 19, 2010
Beautiful Trees #6
Labels:
Artwork,
Jenny Bennett,
New Zealand,
Nikau,
Paintings,
Palm,
Sandi O'Neill,
Tree
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2010
(371)
-
▼
August
(27)
- Image Dump
- Tim's Dilemma
- Guess the word
- Friends and Fellow Travelers
- Conversation with God
- Choice and Commitment
- Twenty-Six Hummers Humming
- Catastrophizing
- Beautiful Trees #6
- My Life As A Perch
- I Love Coaching
- I Love Nature
- What To Do, What To Do?
- Images of Propaganda # 2
- Life Changing Days
- The Water Vapor Channel
- New game: word in pictures
- Tools or Words?
- Weed Again
- Four Hundred Posts
- Letting Go Of My Past
- 100 Things About Me (2010)
- Life's Little Lists
- Images of Propaganda
- 100 Best Novels
- Holding The Paradox
- Going Quantitative
-
▼
August
(27)
No comments:
Post a Comment