John Daly-Peoples

Art Fair Sculpture Trail at the Aotearoa Art Fair
The sculpture on show at the Auckland Art Fair is always one of the highlights of the show as it is often difficult to access and view large scale sculpture. This year the works on show have been expanding significantly with 24 large-scale works by 18 artists installed across the Art Fair precinct, which extends from the area outside the Events Centre to locations around the Viaduct Basin.

The trail will feature leading Aotearoa artists and major international names, along with strong Māori and Pacific representatives.
The artists include Bernar Venet, Braddon Snape, James Rodgers, Hye Rim Lee, Reuben Paterson, Paul Dibble, Caitlen Devoy, Peata Larkin, Martin Creed, a floating work by Gregor Kregar, and a shimmering installation by Lisa Reihana.
Bernar Venet’s Indeterminate Line is a steel form where bending and twisting are balanced with chance. Loops coil and unravel, reflecting the artists decades-long exploration of lines, geometry, and the interplay of order, chaos, and material presence.

In his 2026 work, the weathered corten steel operates as both object and aperture reflecting David McCracken’s enduring interest in balance, repetition, and the tension between solidity and illusion.
He creates forms that appear to extend beyond their physical limits, drawing the viewer into a quiet contemplation of the processes involved.

ARLOS, silk & RYOS, Ben Pearce’s large-scale sculpture celebrates nature, its strength, and its delicate balance. The boulder-like sections of his towering forms seem tethered to the firmament yet soar into the air like the supports of some natural colonnade. figurative aspects and character emerge giving them a sense of animated presence. Shapes and concepts emerge and disappear as the forms interact with the space around them.

Paul Dibble’s Healing a Busy World acknowledges the return of native birds into the built environments of our cities. His flattened volume, references to building outlines and modern architecture interspersed by rectangular windows filled with light and hope. We also see for the first time a new rich green patina and the emblematic, symbolic sticks of healing kawakawa reclaiming the city.

Reuben Paterson’s Koro is a sculptural work from 2023. Crafted from cast aluminium, painted with automotive lacquer, and encrusted with glass crystals, it showcases Paterson’s ability to create works across a diverse range of media.
Through a diverse range of media he creates works which are visually hypnotic and conceptually nuanced.

Hye Rim Lee’s artistic practice navigates the fluid threshold between the real and the virtual, translating digital imagination into tangible form. Gold Rose emerges from her iconic 3D animation series White Rose, where virtual fantasies are reborn through material transformation. In this sculptural work, Lee transforms glass — a medium rooted in her digital world — to explore its dual nature: hard yet fragile, liquid yet solid, transparent yet opaque, in her cast Gold Rose.

Ngaroma Riley is an artist of Te Rarawa, Te Aupōuri, and Pākehā descent. She began her carving journey making Buddhist statues while working in Japan. Her work centres on Māori narratives, with a focus on retelling whānau, hapū and iwi stories through a wahine Māori lens.
Her work Kapahaka Queens is a shout out to all the aspiring performers — the ones who live and breathe haka, who learn their words on the bus, sing their waiata in the shower, practise their pukana in the mirror and who give their heart and soul to every performance.

Inspired by the Waitematā Harbour, Sione Faletau recorded its sounds and translated their frequencies into kupesi patterns. Lalava ke he Uho – Connected to the Essence is formed through intersecting lines, the sculpture speaks to the DNA strand, symbolising the harbour’s life-giving essence. Lalava – meaning to bind – connects sound, place and identity into a site-specific expression of the harbour’s mauri. This is the first time Faletau has worked on a large-scale sculpture with his earlier works focused on digital and video works.
