Dio Today - June 2022

Page 40

Whale tales

Whale Tales art trail is a public art trail that celebrates the collaboration of New Zealand art and conservation. Under the auspices of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), 80 whale tail sculptures were painted by leading and up-and-coming artists and dotted around Auckland for people to discover and enjoy. The sculptures were then auctioned on 2 May to raise funds for the WWF. At the centre of this immersive experience is the plight of the Bryde’s whale (pronounced ‘Broo-dus’) that lives in our backyard, the Hauraki Gulf. The are only approx 135 of these magnificent creatures left. The WWF has a vision of protecting and restoring the mauri (life force) of our ocean that Bryde’s whales need to survive and thrive.

Top: Flora Stevens Oskam (standing) and Zoe Chine, Sophia Liu, Ashley Gan and Grace Umezaki (seated) Top right : Grace Umezaki, Ashley Gan (obscured) and Sophia Liu Above: Ashley Gan and Grace Umezaki

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DIO TODAY

Diocesan Junior School was lucky to be chosen by Stuff.co.nz and sponsored to paint a mini whale tail. It was displayed inside the Auckland Museum until midApril and then returned to us to enjoy. Our Year 6 students followed the creative process to research and plan an idea for our mini tail that promoted awareness around our marine environment and the Bryde’s whale. Junior School staff were invited to vote and, after much debate the winning

entry titled ‘Human Impact’, was by Flora Stevens Oskam (6LS). In her words: “Until recently, the main threat to endangered Bryde’s whales was collision with ships, because they live in the main shipping channel to Auckland’s port. Shipping traffic started to reduce speeds and use an alert system and for eight years now, no Bryde’s whales have been killed by ships. However, there are other threats on the horizon – overfishing, pollution and oil spills. Human impact causes threats, but human impact can save the whales as well.” A small group of Year 6 finalists, guided by Flora, painted the whale tail during their lunchtimes to bring her design to life. We are all very proud of the masterpiece and to be part of creating more awareness for the Bryde's whale within our School community and beyond. Another Dio connection with Whale Tales is the work of alumna and past Junior School pupil Talia Pua. Talia painted a fibreglass whale tail for Britomart that weaves in stories of the history of Chinese migration to New Zealand and the ocean that those migrants crossed to get here. Read Talia's interview about her work at: https://britomart.org/whaletales/.


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Articles inside

Alumnae Breakfast

0
page 84

Meg Wallace

2min
page 83

Judith Milner’s debut art exhibition

8min
pages 80-82

President’s column

3min
page 75

Bailey Mark

7min
pages 78-79

Bridget Kool

4min
pages 76-77

Parents & Friends of Dio

4min
pages 71-74

Sport scholarships

2min
page 67

Junior School sport

2min
page 66

Half-year sports round-up

9min
pages 62-65

Sport

4min
pages 56-59

National reps compete across a range of codes

3min
pages 60-61

Performing Arts

9min
pages 48-53

Service initiatives

4min
pages 44-45

Ever-popular annual events

3min
pages 46-47

Shakespeare Festival

3min
pages 54-55

Whale tales

2min
pages 40-41

Wheels Day

1min
pages 38-39

Junior School playground

2min
pages 36-37

Junior School

4min
pages 34-35

Canine counsellor

2min
pages 32-33

Welcome home

3min
pages 28-29

Leading with a strong voice

5min
pages 26-27

International students returning home

4min
pages 30-31

Carolle Varaghese

2min
page 21

Aniva Clarke

2min
page 20

Celebrating the past

2min
pages 12-13

Educate Plus award

2min
page 14

The Girl Stands Tall

1min
pages 10-11

In Memoriam

2min
page 15

Open for business

2min
page 18

Senior appointments

4min
pages 6-7

Heritage Foundation

1min
pages 8-9

Grace Field

1min
page 19
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