Perched on two fingers on the roof of an art gallery in Wellington, the giant sculpture of a hand has loomed over the New Zealand capital for five years.
Named Quasi, the almost 5m creation of Australia-based sculptor Ronnie van Hout bears an unsmiling human face — because why not?
Some found it disturbing and now, after five years of provoking controversy and myriad emotions — from horror and revulsion to delight — among residents of the city, Quasi is scheduled to be removed from the roof of City Gallery tomorrow.
Photo: AP
It is to be taken to a new home, the gallery said on Wednesday.
“This is either a great day for Wellington or a terrible day for Wellington and there’s not much view in between,” said Ben McNulty, a Wellington City Council member.
McNulty said he felt “devastated” by the sculpture’s departure.
Quasi is made of steel, polystyrene and resin, and was based on scans of Van Hout’s hand and face. It was named in part for Quasimodo, the bellringer in Victor Hugo’s 1831 novel The Hunchback of Notre-Dame.
Hence the male gender some have attributed to Quasi.
It first graced — or haunted — an art gallery in Christchurch, New Zealand, in 2016, but proved polarizing. It was the subject of an op-ed in a local newspaper listing reasons the sculpture “must go,” including claims that one of its outstretched fingers “appears to be inappropriately and belligerently pointing at pedestrians and office workers.”
“Perhaps the monster just wants to be loved?” Van Hout said at the time.
In 2019, Quasi was installed in Wellington.
“He arrived and I won’t say the city unanimously hated him, but I reckon 80 percent were like: ‘What is this monster? What have we done?’” McNulty said.
However, “I think that over time there’s been a bit of a softening, there’s sort of a pro-Quasi group, which I consider myself part of,” he added.
On Wednesday, many at Wellington’s Civic Square, where the gallery with Quasi is, said they had warmed to it, too.
“It’s really disturbing, but it’s a staple of Wellington now,” said Anja Porthouse, who had brought friends and family to see Quasi and was “gutted” it was leaving.
Quasi is to be lifted from the roof by helicopter tomorrow, when the giant hand will travel to an undisclosed location in Australia, the gallery said.
“Everything comes to an end eventually,” Van Hout told reporters.
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