Victoria University of Wellington's Wai-te-ata Press has been announced as a finalist in the prestigious Manly Artists’ Books Awards, for its artists’ book The Wai-te-ata Companion to Poetry.
An artists’ book
is one made by an artist as artwork, and often reinvents the book form and
challenges the reading experience.
The award is a biennial prize run by the Manly Public
Library, New South Wales, Australia. Winning entries are acquired by the
library and entered into specialist artists’ books collections, such as the
Australian National Art Gallery collection, which holds more than 1000 artists’
books that date back to the 1970s.
Wellington artist and curator, Paul Thompson, says the
success of The Wai-te-ata Companion to Poetry is due to the imagination
that has gone into it.
"I had a strong concept for a book, made a mock-up
and went to Wai-te-ata Press to see if they were interested in
collaboration," Mr Thompson says.
Dr Sydney Shep, Reader in Book History at Victoria and
Director of Wai-te-ata Press says: "We recognised a good idea and have the
experience, skills and knowledge to deliver it. The Press is known for its
production of both New Zealand poetry and many other high quality and
typographically adventurous publications.”
Designer and fellow book artist Glenna Matcham, focused
on the opportunity to "bring enthusiasm, design and craft skills to an
unusual project”.
“The Wai-te-ata Companion to Poetry is not a book
to be judged by its cover,” says Dr Shep.
“The plain brown cardboard box holds 10 poems covering
the last 200 years—ranging from well-known classics to poems from contemporary
New Zealand and Australian poets. Each poem is treated as a digital handmade
object rather than just a nicely designed and printed sheet of paper. Whether a
map, a booklet, a cylinder or printed on sandpaper, each poem takes a unique
form dictated by the content.”
“In a way it's like interactive poetry," says Mr
Thompson, “but it works on several levels at the same time. One can read and
enjoy the poems or, like any successful work of art, be immersed in an
intensive experience of thinking, associating and exploring."
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