Just one day after returning to his native Cuba following a five-week residency at Otahuhu College, artist Osmeivy Ortega Pacheco found himself in the midst of catastrophic Hurricane Irma.
With winds of up to 260km per hour, Irma devastated Cuba's northern coast and hit its capital, Havana, in August. It destroyed crops, electricity supplies, roads and buildings; 1.8 million people were evacuated and sheltered in temporary accommodation, and 10 died.
Now Ortega's newfound friends in New Zealand are helping him raise much-needed money toward the rebuild. Well-known New Zealand artists — Michel Tuffery, John Walsh, Stephen Ellis, Seraphine Pick, ceramicist Andy Kingston and sculptor Clovis Viscoe among them — are contributing work to a fundraising exhibition which also includes 20 prints and paintings from 17 of Cuba's leading artists.
The George Fraser Gallery, where the Elam art students usually exhibit, is giving its gallery space for free and Cuban ambassador Mario Alzugaray will open the exhibition.
Otahuhu College art teacher Malcolm McAllister, who arranged for Ortega to visit New Zealand and work with his students on a mural for Auckland Airport, says they wanted to help when they saw the devastation Irma caused.