Available in both softcover, $79.95 , and hardcover, $120.00
224 pages. 280mm (H) x 275mm (L) x 17mm (W)
Publication - December 2013
www.haunuipress.co.nz
info@haunuipress.co.nz
This large, utterly gorgeous book is described by the authors as "a tribute to provincial New Zealand as seen from the road". And what a wonderful tribute it is to "this often under-appreciated, green, in-between wedge of the North Island".
Photographer David Lupton's images were all taken no more than a few metres from where he stopped his car on the roadside (with the exception of a few aerial shots!).
Perhaps the best way to describe the book is to quote the authors from their introduction.
Every day is a journey, and the journey itself home. MATSUO BASHŌ
This book
is part monument, part pictorial tribute to the many journeys and journeyers who,
over the generations, have engraved their mark upon the landscape of our home -
the Manawatū.
As modern
New Zealanders we are all descended from intrepid travellers; dreamers and
seekers who packed their necessities and treasures and set forth from somewhere
in search of a different life at the bottom of the world. Gone but not erased,
their imprint on our lives and our place lingers.
From
those who were here first, stories of ancestral journeys endure in whispered
legend and lullaby and the lie of the land. Later visitors left more forceful marks
on the landscape – latticed transport links, patterned farmland and weathered
structures that punctuate the riverscape we live within. Visual mementoes of
the past, they tell a story and yield beauty and meaning for those who choose to
look.
The
Manawatū seduces you slowly
and gently, revealing its riches in unexpected ways. We set out with the hope
of inspiring others to see our part of the country through slightly different
eyes: this grey-green, in-between wedge of land; hauntingly plain, scattered
with windswept light and ringed by rumpled ranges, wide waters and arching
coastlines.The visual journey herein
is our Manawatū, a linear mosaic of ideas
matched with images rendered from the air and grounded against those taken by
car – each shot no more than a few metres from the roadside. You too can get
behind the wheel, pick a spot on the map between the threads of the Rangitīkei and the Manawatū, and ride into the place
of memories captured here.
DAVID LUPTON
BETTINA ANDERSON
BETTINA ANDERSON
ABOUT THE
AUTHORS
DAVID LUPTON
There is no original in photography, you are the original. Basically
at the end it is your vision which is your original and you sew it all up and
it becomes your work and you have organized it and you have made the
statement and you give this vision to the world.
Ernst Haas
A looker, a thinker, a measurer of time
and space in colour and place, David is the ‘original’ behind this journey on
paper. His long and at times tempestuous love affair with the quiet, unexpected
beauty of the Manawatū comes to life within these pages. Possessing a rare
ability to explore the obvious and thus reveal the exotic in our
surroundings, David’s images speak to the eye on many levels.
David started photographing when he was
six years old, a graduate of the toy Diana camera. This wonderful blend of
light-leaking plastic and a truly dodgy lens is now, as it was then, a cult
classic capable of producing beautiful images rendered not by perfection but by
possibility. He has worked as a professional photographer for what seems like
two lifetimes, producing images for a wide variety of corporate clients, as
well as continuously photographing on a more personal basis for publication
and exhibition.
www.davidlupton.co.nz
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BETTINA ANDERSON
Descended from a long line of colonial fossickers,
goldminers and fisherfolk, it was hardly surprising that Bettina took a shine
to the earth sciences in her days at Otago University. As a child, the back seat of the family station
wagon was always full of sand, rocks and shells ‘far too precious to be left
behind’, with Mum and Dad joking that once she started studying geology, the
tonnage collected went up dramatically.
Bettina’s love of the land and what lies
beneath has translated into a career spanning the science, education and
museum sectors. As she’s aged, rather
than growing up her interests have grown out to encompass a passion for ‘old
stuff’, collective memories and the place these have in the telling of engaging
stories. She now works as a freelance science writer and ‘exhibitionist’ (exhibition
developer) from a patch of Pohangina paradise just outside Palmerston North.
Her collaboration with David is the culmination of too much gazing out the
window at Wharite Peak (when she should have been doing something more
productive to feed and clothe the family).
www.pukekoblue.co.nz
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David has kindly given me permission to reproduce four of his images from the book below and while these will give you an idea of the contents of the book they cannot do justice to the almost 200 glorious photographs included. This is a very special book and I offer the authors and publisher my warmest congratulations on a fine achievement.
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