Massey student achieves Olympic performance dream

Friday 10 January 2020
Twenty-one-year-old Massey student Zakea Page has achieved his lifelong dream of performing at an Olympic opening ceremony, in Lausanne, Switzerland, at the Winter Youth Olympic Games.
Zakea Page receiving the medals he designed from the president of the International Olympic Committee, Thomas Bach.

Zakea Page receiving the medals he designed from the president of the International Olympic Committee, Thomas Bach.

Last updated: Wednesday 6 April 2022

Twenty-one-year-old Massey student Zakea Page has achieved his lifelong dream of performing at an Olympic opening ceremony, in Lausanne, Switzerland, at the Winter Youth Olympic Games.

Mr Page performed his unique art form, which blends sport and art, in front of thousands at Vaudoise Aréna on January 9, making him the first person to design a Youth Olympic medal and perform at an opening ceremony of a Youth Olympic Games 

A passionate hockey player, he executes fast-paced, energetic painting performances using a hockey stick and a ball soaked in Chinese ink.

"My ultimate life ambition has been to perform at the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games, so to be able to achieve that is incredibly humbling,” he says.

Mr Page won an international competition to design the medal for the Youth Olympic Games in April 2019. His design, Beauty in Diversity, which was rendered by fellow Massey student Ryan Ardern, beat more than 300 entries from 60 countries. As a result, he travelled to Lausanne for the games where he received the gold, silver and bronze medals from the president of the International Olympic Committee, Thomas Bach.

Zakea Page performing at the opening of the Youth Olympic Games in Lausanne, Switzerland.

Zakea Page performing at the opening ceremony of the Youth Olympic Games in Lausanne, Switzerland.

Mr Page will begin his third year of a Creative Media production degree at Massey's College of Creative Arts in Wellington this year.

"There's not much between sport and art. For me, it's more of a blur than different disciplines. There's not much that can make half the world cry and half the world cheer at once – sport has immense power, and so does art."

Mr Page credits studying at Massey with helping him achieve his ambitions. “The peers, mentors and friendships I've developed at Massey have really helped me elevate my craft and myself as a person."