New Zealand engraver, commercial artist, publisher (1906–1964)
Ernest Mervyn Taylor (1906–1964) was a notable New Zealand engraver, commercial artist and publisher. He was born in Auckland, New Zealand in 1906 but primarily lived and worked in Wellington, New Zealand until his sudden death at the age of 58.[1][2]
Murals
Taylor completed a number of murals towards the end of his career. Information is varied on the current status of these works: some are known to be intact, some have been boarded over, some are in need of restoration work, and the fate of others is simply unknown.
Between 2015 and 2018, these works were the subject of the E. Mervyn Taylor Mural Search and Recovery Project
at the College of Creative Arts, Massey University.
The project lead to a book Wanted: The Search for the Modernist Murals of E. Mervyn Taylor.[3]
Supervising architect: Gordon Wilson (Government Architect)
Time and Space
Wooden carved panel, carved from one plank of kauri
1850 x 800 mm
E. Mervyn Taylor
1963
Radio NZ boardroom, Radio New Zealand House, 155 The Terrace
Wellington Cable Price Downer House, 108 The Terrace (also referred to as 106–110)
Orchiston, Power & Associates
Industry
Ceramic tiles
E. Mervyn Taylor
1964
Unknown
Site now Berl House.
Expanded information on individual murals
Taita Soil Bureau, "First Kumara Planting"
One of his commissions was a mural at the Taitā headquarters of the Department of Scientific & Industrial Research (DSIR)’s Soil Bureau depicting a cloaked figure using a kō (Māoridigging stick).[4] In the short film "Pictorial Parade No. 128",[5] produced in 1962 by the National Film Unit, Taylor can be seen discussing the mural with Mr. Norman Taylor (Director of the Soil Bureau), and subsequently painting it.
COMPAC Building, "Te Ika-a-Māui"
The mural was commissioned by the New Zealand Government to mark the 1962 completion of the Tasman leg of the Commonwealth Pacific Cable (COMPAC) – a huge underwater telephone cable system that connected New Zealand to its Commonwealth allies in the aftermath of World War Two. The mural was originally housed in the COMPAC landing station in Auckland. In 2014 this mural was discovered by artist Bronwyn Holloway-Smith. The work was brought to public attention once again through her project Te Ika-a-Akoranga.[6]