Te Papa collected the four winning entries, by Minna Zhu, Raymund Santos, Nicholas Reid, and Chloe Or. Or is a first-generation New Zealander, and the winner of the popular vote. Her poster is “visually stunning,” Gassin says, and has the quality of a painting, a tui cheekily holding a paintbrush in the foreground. “It’s a striking visual metaphor for the main message; strengthening and diversity.” Gassin says Nicholas Reid’s winning entryis well-suited to spreading a social message, a series of interlinked arms forming a chain from top to bottom of the poster. “Simple is good.” The young artist winner, Minna Zhu, designed a poster showing a sea of people with differing expressions, and one central person whose expression might have been smiling, or crying, yelling “I’m a Kiwi too.”