80 Fantastic Events for National Poetry Day
The Bards Go Wild: 80 Fantastic Events for National Poetry Day
From seasoned award-winners to newbies facing a microphone for the first time, National Poetry Day — Friday, 28 August —unleashes the power and excitement of poetry for one incredible day of activity all around New Zealand.
Celebrating its 18th year, National Poetry Day 2015 features an astounding 80 events from Kerikeri to Southland and into cyberspace. This year’s calendar holds something for everyone, from aspiring to established poets, and from those who enjoy poetry to those who think poetry isn’t for them. The 2015 calendar of events offers a way for anyone to get involved in the poetry community, discover New Zealand poets, share their own work or find out what it is all about.
“One of the best things about poetry is you can make it into whatever you want it to be,” says national coordinator, Miriam Barr. “There are no rules in poetry, or rather all the rules are there to be broken and bent. Poetry lets you say what you need to say, the way you want to say it.” This year, the New Zealand poetry community brings you poetry slams, poetry-music jams, poetry art exhibitions, performance poetry, poetry with dance, poetry street-chalking, bookshop readings, famous poets reading their work, writing competitions, open mic events that invite you to share, and a bunch of online events open to everyone.
The full calendar of events is live online now. Competitions open for submissions across August and warm-up events kick off the week leading up to National Poetry Day.
Highlights of this year’s National Poetry include:
• Nationwide For the first time ever,
National Poetry Day will be celebrated with an international
link-up: ‘The Ex-Pat Poet's Portal’ features interviews
with and readings by Dr Amy Brown, Jennifer Compton and Anna
Forsyth, New Zealand-born poets living in Melbourne. It’s
hosted by Melbourne poet and host of La Mama Poetica,
Amanda Anastasi, and streamed live on a Google Hangout
broadcast, with questions live on Twitter and a YouTube
video after the event. There’s also the Poetry Phone,
Poems in Your Pocket and more.
• Kerikeri
‘Rhymes in the Vines’ celebrates poetry in
Northland at Fat Pig Vineyard with an open mic and
wine-tasting to wind-down the day after National Poetry Day
on the 29th of August.
• Whangarei An
open mic and the launch of Fast Fibres 2, a
compilation of poems by Northland poets at Mokaba Café
featuring local poets Piet Nieuwland, Michael Botur,
Victoria del la Varis-Woodcock, Maureen Sudlow, and
more.
• Auckland seems to specialise
in quirky events. They include readings at the Happy Tea
House, Grey Lynn, a poetry-event venue in a converted
sleep-out (hot drinks, orange juice, and breakfast
supplied); a poetry walk that starts at the phone box
outside Carl's Junior, next to Aotea Square, and to get
people warmed up, the ninth annual ‘Resurrection Night’,
in which poets dress up as or pay homage to a dead poet.
Slightly more mainstream and totally engaging are readings
at the Takapuna Library with Robert Sullivan and others;
‘AllTomorrow's Poets’, showcasing 10 young poets, in the
tiny space above Time Out Bookstore in Mt Eden; the twelfth
annual reading event by the marvellous ‘Divine Muses’
with Siobhan Harvey, Tusiata Avia and Jack Ross among the
line-up; ‘Poetry Central’, an evening of poetry reading
and festivities at Auckland Central City
Library.
• West Auckland Kumeu
An open mic night. Bethells Beach: The "We" Society
Poetry Day Wrap Party launches the society’s anthology at
Te Henga Studios.
• South Auckland A
poetry slam at Manukau Institute of Technology, featuring
Courtney Sina Meredith.
• Hamilton An
open mic night followed by a poetry slam at the Garden Place
Library; ‘Poetry and Paint’, in which poems become
paintings, at the University of Waikato’s Art Fusion
Gallery, and an exhibition of the work created at ‘Poetry
and Paint’ with a night of performance
poetry.
• Katikati Three events,
including the annual Haiku Poetry Path prize-draw and an
open mic event at Browny’s
Café.
• Palmerston North Five events,
including the Pamutana Poetry Picnic, New Zealand poems set
to music by New Zealand composers and performed by the
Palmerston North Girls’ High School chamber choir, and the
Wisdom Lounge, a digital exhibition showcasing poems and
poetic proverbs from Manawatu and around the
world.
• Wairoa Three events,
including the announcement of the winners of the local
poetry competition — Te Roto, Te Awa, Te Moana -The
Lake, the River, the Ocean, for poems in English or Te
Reo Māori on one of these themes.
• Havelock
North The enterprising owners of Wardini Books
have three events: an after-school event, an open mic night
and a competition for poets aged between five and 18, judged
by Paula Green and Emily Dobson, and open to the entire
Hawkes Bay region.
• New Plymouth
Three events, including a competition for poems
about Taranaki, a ‘mix and match’ poetry-making event
and a poetry walk on the city’s foreshore. Chalk
supplied.
• Dannevirke The winner of
the Tararua District Library’s Online Poetry Competition
is announced.
• Wairarapa poetry rolls
through the district with an incredible number of events in
one day at Pukaha, Featherston, Masterton, Greytown,
Martinborough, Carterton and West
Taratahi.
• Wellington and its surrounding
regions are surely a New Zealand poetry epicentre,
with an outstanding seven events. They include:National
Poetry Day Warm-Up at Te Papa in which eight poets with
poems in in Best NZ Poems 2014 (John Dennison, Dinah
Hawken, Anna Jackson, Gregory O’Brien, Claire Orchard,
Nina Powles, Helen Rickerby and Kerrin P Sharpe) read their
poems; Unity Books has a lunchtime reading titled ‘6 Poets
in 60 Minutes’; Vic Books at the University has reading
and music; at the Kapiti Coast Library, the winners of the
Laughing Out Loud poetry competition are announced during an
open mic night; in Upper Hutt the winners of the 15th annual
Upper Hutt Poetry Competition will be announced at two
events at the Upper Hutt City Library; and in Woburn, Lower
Hutt there’s a reading of poems about the
landscape.
• Nelson has six
events, including four events at the Elma
Turner Library (including ‘Poems for Pikelets’) and
Stoke Library, an inspired window of poems at Page and
Blackmore Booksellers, open to contributions from people
anywhere in the country), and a reading at Page and
Blackmore which will also announce the winner of their
nationwide Animal Laureate poetry competition.
• In Christchurch there are readings
at the South Library, Sydenham, and the Hagley Writer
Institute has two events, including a workshop and the
announcement of the winners of their poetry
competition.
• Dunedin The Dunedin
Public Library is a stellar supporter of National Poetry
Day, and 2015 is no exception. This year, during ‘Many
Happy Returns’, glasses will be raised to toast
Dunedin’s literary treasures on National Poetry Day. This
year Poetry Day coincides with the birthday of Dunedin
writer, the late Janet Frame. MC'd by Diane Brown, with
readings from, Hinemoana Baker, David Eggleton and 2015
Burns Fellow Louise Wallace, as well as three rising stars
selected from the Dunedin Secondary Schools Poetry
Competition. The evening culminates in the announcement of
the 2015 Janet Frame Literary Trust Award
recipient.
• Oamaru has two events
including a performance by David Eggelton and the Spinemark
Poetry Challenge.
• Tiny Outram hosts
J & K Rolling’s Outriders Poetry Tour, an open mic session
plus readings of southern poems by Jenny Powell, Kay
McKenzie Cooke and Richard
Reeve.
• Cromwell Paper Plus is
holding an open mic event and announcing the winners of its
Youth Poetry Competition, for poems about central
Otago.
• Greymouth The District
library announces the winners of its poetry competition
winners, and there’s a tour of local poets to three local
rest homes.
• Gore Jenny Powell and
Kay Mackenzie Cooke are on tour, there’s a huge poetry
display in the library, and an open mic lunchtime the week
following Poetry Day.
It’s an amazing line-up! For more details on National Poetry Day events (including times, entry cost etc), go to https://nznationalpoetryday.wordpress.com/calendar-of-events.
National Poetry Day is managed by the New Zealand Book Awards Trust, which also administers the New Zealand Book Awards and the New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults. In 2015, the Day is administered for the Trust by Booksellers New Zealand and funded by Creative New Zealand.
ENDS