New Zealand poets Steven Toussaint and Gregory Kan
have been awarded the prestigious 2017 Grimshaw Sargeson Fellowship. This is
the first time two poets have been the recipients of the fellowship.
The poets will have the
opportunity to focus on their craft full-time, with each having a six-month
tenure at the Sargeson Centre in Auckland, and sharing an annual stipend of
$20,000.
Originally from the United States, Steven Toussaint is
looking forward to seeing where the fellowship takes him, as his writing is
often troubled by our increasingly digital environment.
“The digital age has opened up wonderful opportunities
for new kinds of communication. However, it has also scattered our attention in
many different directions. At times I feel concerned that my attention is
strained by all the media and digital attractions that exist around me,” he
says.
Steven will use the fellowship to work on a new book
of poetry, which will consist of individual poems with unifying themes about
religious imagination.
Steven’s published works include a chapbook, Fiddlehead,
which was published in New Zealand in 2014, with his first full length
book, The Bellfounder, published the following year in the United
States.
Gregory Kan says the fellowship provides a wonderful
platform to help writers gain traction in an unrestrained world of literature.
“The digital age has meant that we have more writing
than ever before – it’s a form that was previously only accessible to a
privileged group, but is now more pervasive than ever which is fantastic,” he
says.
Gregory will be using the fellowship to work on
another book of poems. He will be consolidating pieces of already completed
work as well as writing new pieces which interrogate the writing of biography
and autobiography in this era of overwhelming and spectacular information.
Gregory published his first book this year, This
Paper Boat with Auckland University Press, which is on the Ockham NZ Book
Awards long list for poetry. His work has been published in numerous literary
journals, as well as contemporary art exhibitions and catalogues.
Frank
Sargeson Trust Chair Elizabeth Aitken-Rose says
she is delighted with the calibre of this year’s fellows and is excited to see
them take their work to the next level.
“The current technological revolution is shining a
light on some wonderful talent we may never have known about before – and this
was quite evident in the quality of applicants we received this year,” she says.
“Being a writer in the digital age gives writers
unprecedented opportunity, yet this can make it more challenging for writers to
cut through and have their voice heard. This is particularly the case for
poets, we are very excited to have two poets win the Fellowship this year.
“The fellowship will assist Steven and Gregory in
gaining traction in this highly competitive environment, giving them a platform from which they can continue to
build their careers and time to dedicate to their projects.”
The
fellowship will run from 1 April 2017 to 30 November 2017. Steven will have the
first stint at the residence with Gregory finishing out the tenure.
In 2016 the fellowship was
awarded to Diana Wichtel and Breton Dukes. Other previous
winners include Alan Duff, Catherine
Chidgey, Michael King and Janet Frame.
The fellowship has been
recognising and supporting some of our greatest talents for more than 30 years,
says Grimshaw & Co Partner Paul Grimshaw.
“It offers vital support to New Zealand writers to
focus, uninterrupted, on their work,” Grimshaw says. “They are contributing to
New Zealand’s literary landscape and we are very proud to support them.”
Further information on the Fellowship is
available here. Any queries
can be directed to Elizabeth Bennie at elizabeth.bennie@grimshaw.co.nz or on +64 9 375 2393.
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