We
are delighted to have Eleanor Catton as our current writer in residence.
Eleanor, who holds the six-month University of Auckland residency, arrived
in mid-July and has been hard at work ever since. She is completing her
second novel The
Luminaries which is due for publication next year, and then she
plans to work on an ambitious trilogy for young adults. Ellie, who is from
Wellington, is a very exciting young writer who is making a wonderful
contribution to the local literary community while she is here. She has
already done readings at several events and she has several more coming up.
It is well worth taking the opportunity to hear her thoughtful and
thought-provoking presentations. She will speak at an English department
staff seminar on The
Showing and The Telling: Voice and Style in Fictive Works on
Wednesday September 26, 4.15 pm (Arts 1, Staff Common Room). All are
welcome. She will also appear in conversation with novelist Emily Perkins
at a Devonport Library Associates event on Thursday November 22. In
October, Ellie will join the group of authors travelling to the Frankfurt
Book Fair, where New Zealand is the guest of honour. MKWC chairman Sam
Elworthy has written an article about the book fair, which is on our web
site http://www.writerscentre.org.nz/news_events.php?rid=75
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Fundraising
Upside Down
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Each
year we try to do a fundraising event or activity to help cover some of our
operating costs. This year we are lucky to be able to work with the
Auckland Theatre Company on the staging of a one-night only performance of
Arthur Meek’s wonderful play On
the Upside Down of the World, directed by Colin McColl and
featuring Laurel Devenie. It will be held at the Victoria Theatre in
Devonport on Monday October 8 at 7.30 pm. The play was staged during the
Auckland Arts Festival and in Wellington last year to great reviews, and
will be on as part of the Nelson Arts Festival after its Devonport outing.
It is a beautiful play based on the diaries of Lady Ann Martin, an early
settler at Judges Bay in Auckland, which talk about her experiences with
local Maori. This performance, part of the Auckland Heritage Festival, is
one night only and the opportunity to see it might not come again soon.
Tickets are $30 for adults and $25 for students, available through the
Michael King Writers’ Centre. Arthur Meek, at left, was our writer in
residence in 2011.
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Friends
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Our
wonderful Devonport Friends group is now being led by Lynn Dawson,
following the decision by Ian Free to step down. The Friends play a huge
role in the centre, providing valuable help with projects such as the
garden, library, open afternoons, events and giving help or hospitality to
our resident writers when it’s needed. Ian, who wields the meanest barbecue
tongs in town, has made an enormous contribution to the centre over five or
more years. We thank him for that, but we know he won’t be far away. Lynn
brings great ideas, energy and enthusiasm to the Friends. We are always
keen to have more people involved in the Friends group or as volunteers at
the centre, so let me know if you are interested. A new project where we
could use a hand is to research and build a data base of information about
the television documentaries and films that Michael King made, with the
goal of being able to screen his work.
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A precious gift from
Barry Brickell
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Our dear friend and renowned clay artist Barry Brickell, from Driving Creek
Railway in Coromandel, spent two months at the centre through the winter working
on a range of writing projects. This was his third stay as a visiting
writer and we love having him here. Barry has left some of his beautiful
pottery at the centre, which is always much admired. This year he gave the
centre this beautiful garden sculpture, featuring words from a poem by
R.A.K. Mason. We plan to make a small pathway around the sculpture with
pavers. Next year the Dowse Art Gallery in Lower Hutt will hold a major
retrospective exhibition about Barry’s life and work.
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What’s
coming up
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- Eleanor Catton on The Showing and The Telling,
University of Auckland, Arts 1, Staff Common Room (Room 583) on
Wednesday September 26 at 4.15 pm.
- The Friends will host an open afternoon at the centre
as part of the Auckland Heritage Festival on Sunday September 30, from
2 to 4 pm.
- On the Upside Down of the World at The Victoria Theatre, Monday October 8, 7.30
pm. Tickets on sale through the centre.
- Residential workshop on Writing Science at Vaughan Park from
October 20 to 22.
- Poet Laureate and former resident Ian Wedde will do
a reading at the opening of the Devonport Arts Festival, with former
Poet Laureate Michele Leggott on Saturday November 17, 4 pm, at The
Depot.
- The Friends will host an open afternoon at the
centre as part of the Devonport Arts Festival on Sunday November 18,
from 2 to 4 pm.
- Michele Leggott and guests will do a reading and
discussion of her new work Wind
and Weather which explores a family mystery and its
connections with Devonport, at The Depot on Wednesday November 21,
from 5.30 pm for 6 pm (free, but BYO drinks and nibbles).
- The Devonport Library Associates will feature
Eleanor Catton and Emily Perkins in conversation on Thursday November
22 from 7.30 pm at the Devonport Library.
- The Friends are organising a performance of Playing Miss Haversham
written and performed by actress Helen Moulder on Sunday November 25,
at 4 pm, as part of the Devonport Arts Festival (venue to be decided).
Tickets will be on sale through the centre.
- Launch of Signals,
our new literary journal featuring the work of students who have taken
part in the 2012 Young Writers’ Programme. This will be held on
Saturday December 8 from 10am (venue to be decided).
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News and notes
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- The wonderful Going West
Festival is on this month. Check out the programme here.
- Creative NZ is calling for
applications for the prestigious Katherine Mansfield Menton
Fellowship. It offers a residency of at least six months in Menton,
France, and a stipend of NZ$75,000. Applications close on Friday
September 21. Click for more information.
The University of Canterbury is also calling for applications for the
Ursula Bethel Residency (applications close early October). Details here
- The NZ Society of Authors
and the Manukau Institute of Technology Creative Writing School are
offering a one-day workshop in Newmarket on digital publishing,
graphic novels, performance poetry and social media, on Saturday
September 29. Click for details.
- The Victoria University of
Wellington is calling for applications for its 2013 Writer in
Residence. Applications close on September 30. Applications for the
University of Waikato/CNZ Writer in Residence close on September 28.
Massey University is offering a 12-week residency in 2013, starting
late April, and applications close on November 2.
- Playmarket has launched
Asian Ink, a new competition for NZ Asian writers.
They are looking for the best new and original work to workshop.
Submissions are due by September 28. http://www.playmarket.org.nz/asianink
- Takahe magazine is running two competitions, one for
poetry and one for essays in cultural
studies. The deadline for both is September 30. http://www.takahe.org.nz
- Australian publication [untitled] is
seeking short story submissions for issue six, due
out in early 2013. The maximum is 8,000 words, any genre. http://www.untitledonline.com.au
- The 2012 Manhire Prize in
Creative Science Writing is open for entries until October 5.
This competition is run by the Royal Society of New Zealand in
partnership with the
International Institute of Modern Letters to encourage and improve the
science communication
through popular science writing. Full details are available
at
http://www.royalsociety.org.nz/programmes/competitions/manhire-prize/2012-information/
- The international New
Writer annual prose and poetry competition closes on November 30.
There is a fee for entry. http://www.thenewwriter.com/prizes.htm
The international New Writer annual prose and poetry competition
closes on November 0. There is a fee for entry
. http://www.thenewwriter.com/prizes.htm
- Remember Margaret Mahy by clicking on this link
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The
Michael King Writers' Studio Trust wishes to thank its supporters and
partners, including the Auckland Council, Creative New Zealand, the Lion Foundation, the ASB
Community Trust, the Joyce Fisher Charitable Trust and Deloitte.
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