pxpxBack
Created on March 2, 2026
1025 Ferry Road, Woolston, Christchurch 8023, New Zealand
Navigate

Created in collaboration with researcher Spencer Virgin, this mural by Hawaiian artist Punky Aloha centres on ʻōpihi / ngākihi (limpets).

In many Pacific cultures, ʻōpihi represent family and symbolise maternal and familial bonds, resilience, and sustenance. They are an important food source and are also used for tools and ceremony. Embedded within their harvesting is the principle of taking only what you need, ensuring there will always be enough for future generations.

The mural depicts a larger-than-life maternal figure swimming through the ocean. She is anchored by whales, representing abundance, and adorned with ʻōpihi. Moving toward the shoreline, she carries ʻōpihi back to her people.

Beyond its cultural symbolism, the deeper message speaks to having a maternal relationship with land and ocean. Loving our surroundings as a mother would, with protectiveness and strength, and doing what we can to guide our earth toward abundance and growth.

Punky Aloha—UntitledPunky Aloha—Untitled
Hunted by FLARE Ōtautahi Street Art Festival .
Pictures by Sofiya Romaneko.

Marker details

Camera usedFujifilm X-S10
Date created2026-02-17T11:00:00.000Z
FestivalSea Signals, Flare Ōtautahi Street Art Festival
Marker typeartwork
CityChristchurch
CountryNew Zealand