A single red rose head made from fabric, with a plastic base and no stem.
A single red rose head made from fabric, with a plastic base and no stem.
A single red rose head made from fabric, with a plastic base and no stem.
A single red rose head made from fabric, with a plastic base and no stem.
A single red rose head made from fabric, with a plastic base and no stem.
A single white rose head made from fabric, with a plastic base and no stem.
A single white rose head made from fabric, with a plastic base and stem.
A single white rose head made from fabric, with a plastic base and no stem.
A single white rose head made from fabric, with a plastic base and stem.
A single white rose head made from fabric, with a plastic base and partial stem.
A sealed pink and red wrapper with Japanese [?] writing on exterior, likely containing a lolly or sweet.
The Social Development Minister says staff are having to be flexible when deciding what financial support those caught up in the Christchurch earthquake are eligible for.
A PDF document containing feedback from the public about All Right? campaigns and projects. The feedback was collected from emails, social media, and in-person conversations.
The winners parade at the Canterbury A&P Show.
A PDF copy of a report to Synod written by Jolyon White, Director of Anglican Advocacy in 2011.
Object Overview for 'Selwyn District engineering lifelines project: Earthuake hazard assessment'
A sign on a lamppost in Brooklands, reading, "The government is stealing our land".
The winners parade at the Canterbury A&P Show.
Liz Kivi standing outside the UC QuakeBox at the Canterbury A&P Show.
A PDF copy of an annual report written by Jolyon White, Director of Anglican Advocacy in 2011.
Video of Maryrose Ansell's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
A tribute in the form of a pink wire and fabric butterfly attached by wire to a green stick.
Bunch of artificial fabric, plastic and wire pink, purple and white flowers with greenery tied with a red ribbon.
White fabric artificial rose flower head, without stem. Flower head is dirty and stained. Has plastic sepals at base.
White fabric artificial rose flower head, without stem. Has ring of plastic stamens between layers of petals. Plastic sepals.
In response to the loss of our inner city of Christchurch, we were inspired to create this website, Lost Christchurch, as a freely accessible archive of photographs, social history and memories of …
INTRODUCTION: There is little research on the role of creative arts and craft in disaster recovery. This article reports findings about the emergent role of crafting from research conducted after the 2010–2011 series of earthquakes in Christchurch and surrounding districts in Aotearoa New Zealand. In particular, the article focuses on the significance and differing interpretations of the notion of place expressed by participants through their craftwork, in this case led by women and mediated by the post-earthquake geographic and temporal context. METHOD: This qualitative research included nine individual interviews and five focus group interviews with crafters from Christchurch and surrounding districts. There were 35 participants in total, 33 were women. Applied thematic analysis was used to code the data and identify themes. These themes included connection to place, the symbolism of craft, the healing experience of craft groups and places for women. The notion of place was evident across all three themes. FINDINGS: The findings from the research demonstrate differing ways in which the significance of place was reflected in the craftwork. Participants interpreted the concept of place in descriptive, symbolic, and therapeutic ways. IMPLICATIONS: More understanding about the way creative endeavours like crafting can be used to help ameliorate the impact of natural disasters is needed. Social work practitioners are encouraged to explore place-based wellbeing during their work with service users and to include aspects of artistry, craft and creativity.
A huge arm tattooed with words depicting various kinds of violence and anti-social behaviour like 'brawls', 'assault', 'drugs', rape', 'theft' etc and with the letters of the word 'HATE' on each of the four fingers, squeezes New Zealand. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
A PDF copy of a page on the EQ Recovery Learning site which linked to a YouTube video. This short video provides an insight into the design and location of the Canterbury Earthquake Memorial, due to be completed in February 2017. We meet its designer Grega Vezjak, who shares his vision for the Memorial
Anne Williams and Sally Roome standing outside the UC QuakeBox container at the Canterbury A&P Show.