Main Trunk Lines - Celebrating NZ Poetry
MEDIA RELEASE
12 July 2005
For immediate
release
A major exhibition of New Zealand poetry from the past 150 years opens at the National Library Gallery on 22 July.
Drawing extensively on the book and manuscript collections of the Alexander Turnbull Library, Main Trunk Lines: New Zealand Poetry samples some of the country's best-known poems alongside the more peripheral, experimental and surprising
Exhibits range from Eileen Duggan's teapot to a cartoon about James K Baxter by Chris Knox. Also included are book-designs, voice recordings, Anna Livesey's series of commissioned poems on a set of beer coasters, and two poems written by James K Baxter on the wallpaper of Michael Illingworth's house.
From the widely accepted to the radical - Thomas Bracken's 'God Defend New Zealand' to Cilla McQueen's 'Dogwobble' - Main Trunk Lines offers visitors a bearing on the broad imaginative map of New Zealand poetry.
Collaborations between visual artists and poets have long been a feature of New Zealand cultural life. Photographs by Alan Knowles, Robert Cross and others will provide a composite group-portrait of the poets behind the lines. Works by Waiheke-based Denis O'Connor incorporate poems by Allen Curnow, Janet Frame and others. Further artists in the exhibition include Ralph Hotere, Colin McCahon, John Reynolds, Saskia Leek, John Pule, Fiona Pardington, Virginia King, John Baxter, Toss Woollaston and Michael Illingworth. The short poem-films of Richard von Sturmer are also included.
The 'main trunk lines' in the title are the lines of poetry that run through the books and art works in the exhibition - the lines that have shaped and influenced the imaginative life of New Zealand. Featuring the most significant poems and publications of the past 150 years, the exhibition looks at poetry today, how it got here and where it's going in the future.
A well-stocked reading room will be a feature of the exhibition, allowing visitors to sit back and savour a huge range of current poetry titles. A diverse programme of related events will also be offered during the course of the exhibition.
Main Trunk Lines is curated by Jenny Bornholdt (current Te Mata Estate Poet Laureate) and Gregory O'Brien.
EVENTS TIMETABLE
EXHIBITION
MAIN TRUNK LINES
New Zealand
poetry
22 July – 30 October
2005
EVENTS
Celebrating Wellington Poets
The New
Zealand Book Council celebrates Montana National Poetry Day
with James Brown, Jenny Bornholdt, Geoff Cochrane, Bill
Manhire, Gregory O’Brien, Chris Price and Ashleigh Young.
Tickets available from the Book Council. Email
events@bookcouncil.org.nz or telephone 499 1569 ($5 members,
$6 students/unwaged, $7 non members).
Friday 22 July,
Auditorium, 12.00noon
Writers on Mondays
The
National Library Gallery is pleased to support the
poetry-related events in the Writers on Mondays programme
presented by the International Institute of Modern Letters
in association with City Gallery Wellington. All events held
Mondays at City Gallery at 1.00pm. Free admission. Visit
www.vuw.ac.nz/modernletters/ to view the full programme (11
July – 26 September).
18 July Two New Zealand Poets: Adam Prize-winner Emily Dobson unveils A Box of Bees, her first collection, and Anna Jackson offers a selection of recent work.
25 July New Zealand Poetry Abroad: Belgian poet/translator Jan Lauwereyns and Gregory O’Brien read their own work and talk about taking New Zealand poetry to Antwerp, Rotterdam and Moscow.
1 August The Writer in the House: Victoria University Writer-in-Residence Stephanie de Montalk reads from her new collection Cover Stories and previews work in progress.
8 August Two American Poets: Nick Twemlow is a Fulbright fellow, poet and literary magazine editor exploring his New Zealand roots. He and poet Robyn Schiff read and discuss their work and the US poetry scene.
15 August Lunch with the Laureate: current Te Mata Estate Poet Laureate Jenny Bornholdt in readings and conversation with Damien Wilkins.
The Road to
Jerusalem
A documentary featuring the words and works of
James K Baxter. (Director: Bruce Morrison, Morrison Grieve,
New Zealand, 1997, 74 minutes, colour, BetaSP.) Screening
courtesy of The New Zealand Film Archive Ngâ Kaitiaki o ngâ
Taonga Whitiâhua.
Thursday 28 July, Auditorium,
12.10pm
Guided Tour of Main Trunk Lines with curators
Jenny Bornholdt and Gregory O’Brien.
Thursday 4 August,
Gallery, 12.10pm
The Karaoke Poet Strikes Again
A
lunchtime performance by Craig Ireson, creator of the
highly-acclaimed Karaoke Poetry, recently on show at BATS.
Winner ‘Best of the Fringe 2005’ and ‘Best Spoken Word
Fringe 2005’. ‘Karaoke Poetry is about a time in the
not-too-distant future when people have become tired of idle
idols, of pre-fabricated pop stars mumbling their way onto
the rich lists, and return to poetry as their songs and
poets as their pop stars.’ Free admission.
Thursday 11
August, Auditorium, 12.10pm
Early Days Yet: a profile of
the poet Allen Curnow
A special screening of the 2001 New
Zealand Film Festival documentary. (Director: Shirley
Horrocks, Point of View Productions, New Zealand, 2001, 73
minutes, colour, DVD.)
Thursday 18 August, Auditorium,
12.10pm
Bell Gully National Schools Poetry
Award
Readings by Nick Ascroft, Jenny Bornholdt,
Bernadette Hall, Bill Manhire. The National Schools Poetry
Award will be presented after the readings. Public welcome,
free admission.
Friday 19 August, City Gallery,
6.00pm
The Roaring Forties
A documentary about Gary
McCormack and Sam Hunt’s 1995 poetry road tour. (Director:
Bruce Morrison, Anson Grieve Productions, New Zealand, 1995,
colour, 50 minutes, BetaSP.) Screening courtesy of The New
Zealand Film Archive Ngâ Kaitiaki o ngâ Taonga
Whitiâhua.
Thursday 25 August, Auditorium, 12.10pm
The
Count: profile of a polemicist
A documentary that looks
at the life of Count Geoffrey Potocki de Montalk: poet,
pamphleteer, pagan, pretender to the Polish throne, and,
arguably, New Zealand's greatest eccentric. Filmed in
Wellington 1985. (Miller Productions, Wellington; Producer
Stephanie de Montalk, Director Ian Paul, colour, 50 minutes,
BetaSP, first screened TVOne 1987.) Screening courtesy of
The New Zealand Film Archive Ngâ Kaitiaki o ngâ Taonga
Whitiâhua.
Thursday 1 September, Auditorium,
12.10pm
Hone Tuwhare: the return home
A documentary
about Hone Tuwhare’s return to his birthplace near Kaikohe,
75 years after leaving Northland. Featuring poet Glenn
Colquhoun. (Director: Michelle McGregor, Blue Totara
Limited, New Zealand, 60 minutes, colour, DVD.) Screening
courtesy of The New Zealand Film Archive Ngâ Kaitiaki o ngâ
Taonga Whitiâhua.
Thursday 8 September, Auditorium,
12.10pm
Musing in Maoriland: New Zealand colonial
poetry
A talk by Harry Ricketts, Jane Stafford and Mark
Williams.
From the sublime to the gorblimey, colonial
poetry has been seen as a
source of entertainment,
contempt and embarrassment by later
generations. However,
poetry played a central role in the way that
19th-century
New Zealand thought and talked about itself, and
offers
fascinating insights into the attitudes and preoccupations
of the
time.
Harry Ricketts is the co-editor of Spirit
in a Strange Land: a selection
of New Zealand spiritual
verse and its sequel Spirit Abroad, and How You
Doing: a
selection of New Zealand comic and satiric verse.
Maoriland:
New Zealand literature 1872-1914, by Jane
Stafford and Mark Williams, will
appear shortly.
Thursday 15 September, Auditorium, 12.10pm
Four Men
and a Woman
Readings by poets James Brown, Glenn
Colquhoun, Chris Orsman, and Vincent O’Sullivan. Chaired by
Lydia Wevers.
Thursday 22 September, Auditorium,
12.10pm
Celebrating Our Poets Laureate
Readings by
Bill Manhire (1997), Elizabeth Smither (2001), Brian Turner
(2003), and Jenny Bornholdt (2005). Light refreshments at
5.00pm. Public welcome, free admission.
Thursday 6
October, Auditorium, 5.00 for 5.30pm
Four Women and a
Man
Readings by poets Hinemoana Baker, Kate Camp, Anna
Livesey, and Vivienne Plumb. Chaired by Vincent
O’Sullivan.
Thursday 13 October, Auditorium, 12.10pm
A
New Paradise
Pacific poets read and discuss their work. A
growing voice in the New
Zealand landscape speaks of the
journey and experiences in search of
identity and a
new-found paradise in Aotearoa.
Thursday 20 October,
Auditorium, 12.10pm
Guided Tour of Main Trunk Lines with
curators Jenny Bornholdt and Gregory O’Brien.
Thursday 27
October, Gallery, 12.10pm
ENDS
ENDS