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Friday, December 6, 2024

Visitors flock to world’s biggest dam mural

Visitors are reportedly flocking to the South-West town of Collie to see the $1.5 million Collie Mural Trail, including the biggest dam mural in the world.

Fifteen Western Australian artists and one from interstate were selected to paint the town murals, with their designs including references to the history of Collie, Aboriginal culture and the natural environment.

“It’s great to see visitors already flocking to Collie to view the incredible murals throughout the town, and of course the ‘mega-mural’ underway at Wellington Dam,” said Premier Mark McGowan.

“My Government, in particular Mick Murray, has worked hard to deliver this project,” he said.

“The Collie Visitors Centre is already reporting double the number of visitors during peak times with people taking maps for the mural trail, and that should continue to grow when the remaining murals, including the Wellington Dam mural are complete.

The Collie Mural Trail town walls component of the project is nearing completion, with 12 town murals painted in recent weeks and four more to be painted next week.

The centrepiece of the trail is the Wellington Dam’s impressive 8,000 square metre mega-mural being painted by Australian artist Guido van Helten.

The artwork is inspired by local stories and photographs as van Helten spent time in town to understand the community and created a design that reflects them.

But the final design is yet to be revealed, and can only be discovered by watching the wall being painted in real time, so people are travelling to see it unfold.

During the Collie Mural Trail installation, the number of visitors through the Collie Visitor Centre more than doubled, with steady numbers continuing.

The Collie Mural Trail project is part of the McGowan Government’s plan to diversify the local economy and deliver sustainable jobs through developing industries including tourism.

The biggest dam mural in the world is well underway and unseasonal November rain has extended the project into school holidays, giving more people the chance to watch the artist up in the scaffolding, painting on a scale most people have never seen before.

The Premier said it had been a monumental task, with people abseiling to clean the wall, building a specially designed scaffolding platform to paint it, and the design drawn and mapped onto a grid to help the artist translate his design from concept to a scaled mega-mural.

The Wellington Dam mural is expected to be completed in January. 

“As well as displaying fantastic artwork, the mural trail encourages people to come and visit Collie, walk around and support local businesses and the local economy,” said Mr McGowan.

“I urge every Western Australian who is looking for a new weekend getaway destination to consider coming to Collie and seeing all the exciting developments that have been happening around the town.”

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