Jean Michel Camille Malfroy Sculpture

Public Art : Jean Michel Camille Malfroy Sculpture
(aka J M Camille Malfroy bust)
Sculptors : © George Andrews
Description : A 70cm Bronze bust of Jean Michel
Camille Malfroy
Date Unveiled: The Jean Michel Camille Malfroy bust
was unveiled August 30th, 2007.
Location : The sculpture can be found at the
Oruawhata-Malfroy Fence surrounding the Malfroy Geysers in Government Gardens, Rotorua, New Zealand. Also
arounf the fence line can be found the two wood carvings Oruawhata and
Tunohopu.
Inscription :
Malfroy Geysers
Centenary of the death of
Jean-Michel Camille Malfroy
1839-1897
Chairman of Rotorua Town Board
1891-1897
Chevalier De La Legion D'Honneur. |
So who was Jean Michel Camille Malfroy? :
Jean Michel Camille Malfroy (1839-1895), better known as Camille, was born in France in 1839. During the 1850's
Camille, his father and brother travelled to Australia to try their luck during the Victorian gold rush.
By the early 1960's Camille was living in New Zealand. He gained a reputation for designing
effective water races and mine pumping equipment including a centrifugal minerals separator, a reversible turbine
for winding purposes, and sluice ripples made from cut railway lines.
In 1886 Malfroy headed to Rotorua as the engineer for the wharf and the town water supply. He was
also responsible for recording the changes in lake level and thermal activity following the Tarawera eruption.
During the 1889 Exposition Coloniale in Paris, in which he won a silver medal, he used the opportunity to toddle
off and check out the English and European spa facilities with the thought of improving those in Rotorua.
Malfroy saw the tourist potential for the thermal town of Rotorua. Not only did he focus on the
sanatoriums and bath houses but the infrastructure including parks, lawns, roads and paths which made the location
more appealing to tourists.
Of all of Malfroy's inventions his trio of artificial geysers (Malfroy Geysers) in the
Government Gardens is his best known. Malfroy tapped into the Oruawhata thermal springs, which were filled with
boiling water and poionous gases, by using pipes and regulating valves to create three 12m high geysers. The
unveiling of the artificial geysers coincided with Queen Victoria's birthday in May, 1890. The Oruwhata
springs also happened to be a burial pit for the remains of Maori warriors.
Sadly over the years the geysers have deteriorated.
Artist Statement : "It was just a dream to model.
There's so much character in his face. It has been a lovely thing to work on," - Rotorua Daily
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