Category Archives: Expressive Arts

Expressive Arts – anything theatre, creative writing or digital media production at Massey University

PANZ member says WRITE ON…re: Professing Creativity Conference at Massey University, Wellington

 donn GBHi writers,

As writers our task is to give our writing, our art, time.

In early February I attended the Professing Creativity Conference at MasseyUniversity in Wellington. This conference saw the launch of the Aotearoa Creative Writing Research Network.  I spent three days listening to some of New Zealand’s most well-known creative writers speak about their own writing and teaching creative writing in Aotearoa.

One keynote address was given by Angie Farrow, who teaches Theatre and Creative Processes at Massey, is a fellow PANZ member, and an award winning playwright.

Her presentation focused on experimenting, – playing, taking risks, and being brave. I felt totally inspired by her words and wanted to pass on her message.  She encouraged writers to tap the imagination and dive deeply into spaces we don’t always want to go. Angie suggested by dreaming the story we actually get to visit a ‘small place’ and this means language is only one part of this world. It worked for me. Thanks Angie.

I think the importance of believing in our own freshness, writing with the vitality of our own experiences,  fuelled by our imaginations is priceless.

So go on – take the risk.

Write on…

Donna Banicevich Gera

Playwrights Association of New Zealand
http://www.playwrights.org.nz

Arts on Wednesday, Wellington campus, on April 9th will be full of Improv!

Members of the Wellington Improvisation troupe including from left Darryn Woods, Belle Harrison, Christine Brooks, Ryan Hartigan and Peter Dorn

Members of the Wellington Improvisation troupe including from left Darryn Woods, Belle Harrison, Christine Brooks, Ryan Hartigan and Peter Dorn


Improv show more than just quick laughs

Theatre and comedy act the Wellington Improvisation Troupe headline a free lunchtime show at Massey University’s Wellington campus on April 9 aimed at not just gaining some audience laughs but demonstrating the art of quick thinking too. Members of the public are welcome to see the one-off performance invented on the spot from audience suggestions.

The show, in Massey Wellington’s Theatre Laboratory, is part of the Arts on Wednesday series hosted by the School of English and Media Studies, which brings free performances and artists onto campus on Wednesday lunchtimes.

Organiser, Associate Professor Elspeth Tilley, says Massey’s Bachelor of Communication students are also gaining skills from seeing such theatrical techniques acted out on stage.

“Decisiveness and nimble thinking are particularly crucial skills in today’s fast-moving media and business worlds, which is why our Bachelor of Communication students are learning theatrical improvisation alongside more traditional business communication skills.”

“We are delighted that Wellington Improvisation Troupe has agreed to give a live demonstration of where the students’ work on spontaneity, storytelling and public performance can take them.

“WIT is a world-class improvisation group, and as well as being a lot of fun, their shows embody the kind of rapid problem-solving skills that business leaders are telling us they want in graduates – the ability to think on their feet,” she says.

The series aims to expose students to a diverse range of arts and artists to spark their creativity.

“Students often genuinely can’t afford to see a lot of shows.  We know the value of seeing and hearing a wide range of artists to the development of their aesthetic understanding, so Massey works with both established and emerging artists to bring short free shows onto campus whenever we can,” Dr Tilley says.

“The public are also most welcome to join us for all Arts on Wednesday shows.”

Media Students Excel

Norman Zafra’s documentary ‘A Friend in Sight’ has been selected for competition and screening in the Documentary Edge Film Festival (Auckland and Wellington, May-June).

Norman made the documentary for Radha O’Meara’s paper Media Practice and Global Culture in 2013.

 

Virginia O’Connor is one of four women who have made a mockumentary webisode series ‘Capital Culture’, which was profiled in the Dom Post:

http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/news/local-papers/the-wellingtonian/9874108/Webisodes-capture-Capitals-creative-life

Virginia was a writer and key creator of the series, and she plays the role of Frankie, who features especially in episode 1:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CXP3aehMeCk&feature=share&list=UUdu45nVrAocOd8AqP5VkMMQ&index=5

Virginia has completed several papers in Expressive Arts, including Radha O’Meara’s Media Script Writing and Documentary papers, and Emma Willis’s theatre papers.

Writers Week partners with the School of English and Media Studies

School of English and Media Studies Partners with the New Zealand Festival of the Arts

The School of English and Media Studies 2014 Writers Read series kicked off in style last week with a partnership with the New Zealand Festival of the Arts Writers Week. Massey partnered with Writers Week to host New Zealand events in Wellington and Palmerston North for world-renowned Indian-born Canadian novelist, Jaspreet Singh. School lecturer, Stuart Hoar, also launched his new play, PASEFIKA, at Circa Theatre as part of the wider festival, and two new novels by School tutors were launched at Writers Week, Tina Makereti’s Where the Rēkohu Bone Sings and Mary McCallum’s Dappled Annie and the Tigrish

Massey’s School of English and Media Studies 2014 Writers Read series kicked off in style last week with a partnership with the New Zealand Festival of the Arts Writers Week. Massey partnered with Writers Week to host New Zealand events for world-renowned Indian-born Canadian novelist, Jaspreet Singh. In Wellington Jaspreet joined Senior Lecturer, Dr Ingrid Horrocks, in conversation about his latest novel, Helium. The novel sifts through the anti-Sikh pogroms that took place in India in 1984 and “teases out the complicated intersection of family, love, politics, and hate” (Publishers Weekly). The event was held at the Embassy Theatre and attracted a large, attentive audience. The School also brought Jaspreet to Palmerston North, where he spoke at the Palmerston North City Library on Friday night, also as part of our Writers Read series.

The School’s own media script writing lecturer, Stuart Hoar, was also a featured guest at Writers Week, and followed this by opening the Wellington end of our Arts on Wednesdays events in Wellington, now in their third year. Stuart talked about his new play, PASEFIKA, playing at Circa Theatre as part of the wider New Zealand Festival of the Arts.

Two of our current teaching staff also launched and celebrated new books during Writers Week: Dr Tina Makereti’s launched her first novel, Where the Rēkohu Bone Sings and Mary McCallum her first novel for children, Dappled Annie and the Tigrish. Tina and Mary have both been working for the School of English and Media studies for many years, and have contributed to our fiction and life writing papers. Our in-coming Artist-in-Residence, Alice Miller, also a former Massey tutor, launched her first collection of poetry, The Limits.

In other Massey involvement with the 2014 Writers Week in Wellington city, Dr Horrocks hosted an edgy event on Jane Austen with Walter A. Haas Professor in the Humanities at Stanford, Terry Castle, once described by Susan Sontag as “the most expressive, most enlightening literary critic at large today”; while Professor Peter Lineham, of the School of Humanities, convened a conversation with Diarmaid MacCulloch, one of Britain’s most distinguished living historians and Professor of History of the Church at the University of Oxford.

Congratulations to all involved!

writers week ems

Where the Rekohu Bone Sings by Tina Makereti

Tina Makereti,  BA and Masters  at Massey, has lectured and tutored for Massey  for a number of years. Her first novel ‘Where the Rekohu Bone Sings’ was launched with Random.

http://www.unitybooks.co.nz/counterculture/launch-update-where-the-rekohu-bone-sings-by-tina-makereti/

tina makereti novel launch March 2014 where the rekohu bone sings

 

f Tina reading at the launch!

 

 

New FB page for Welly Arts on Wednesday

AOWWCSTAre you in Wellington? Arts on Wednesday at Wellington campus has a new FB page to keep you up to date.

 

We don’t have an advance schedule of our events as we’re adding things all the time – so to make sure you don’t miss out, join us at https://www.facebook.com/WellyArtsWednesdays to get news of new things as we add them (got some improv and some other exciting stuff in the pipeline).

Wellington Arts on Wednesday

This week (March 12) at Wellington campus we welcome multi-award-winning playwright, radio dramatist, film scriptwriter and novelist Stuart Hoar to Massey Wellington’s Arts on Wednesdays Series to talk about his work, his inspirations, his creative processes, and the role of the arts in Aotearoa New Zealand society in the 21st Century.

March 12, 1pStuart Hoar 2m to 1.45pm, join us in the Theatre Lab, Room 5D14, for tea, coffee, biscuits and Stuart’s wisdom on the creative work of play- and script-writing.

You are welcome to bring your paper-bag lunch!

This is a free event, all welcome.
See us on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/WellyArtsWednesdays

Arts on Wednesdays, Manawatu Campus Schedule

School of English and Media Studies presents

Semester One, Part One, 2014: 12.30– 1.30pm, Free Admission

February 26th     ART ATTACK: MUSIC/POETRY/SONG – Joy Green, Vanessa StaceySlam poetry, original sounds and songs and more…

Vanessa Stacey is a Wellington based Singer/songwriter and multimedia artist, has recently toured New Zealand including playing Homegrown and Tora Tora Tora Festivals. This year she is in the throes of recording collaborations with Horibuzz, Electric Wire Hustle and DJ Spell on her debut ep due out later this year.

Joy Green has slam poetry and poetry installation success. Caesar was recently adapted and directed at Te Manawa by Joy, she is currently producing Manawatu Summer Shakespeare As You Like It.

Location: Food Hall, Concourse, Massey University, Manawatu Campus

March 5th     DRAMA – 139.104 Drama in Performance Students’ PresentationAll My Sons  Arthur Millar’s Tony Award winning masterpiece weaves a brilliant + compelling story about two families in the aftermath of World War II. Students from Massey University’s 139.104 Drama in Performance deliver a slice of All My Sons .

Location: Black Sheep Theatre, Room 2, Wool Building, University Avenue, Massey University, Manawatu Campus

March 12th MUSIC – Harry LilleyHarry Lilley, Student City Artist of the Year 2013, Best Artistic Facilitation 2013 presents a solo instrumental sonic generation.  Immerse yourself in noise, guitar + a collection of other good things.

Location:  Concourse, Massey University, Manawatu Campus

March 19th MUSIC/DRAMA – Liz KirkmanHot off the Fringe Festival 2014, Wellington, Liz presents Jezebel of Jazz –Songs and Stories of Jazz Singer Anita O’Day, including The Man I love, Sweet Georgia Brown,  and Tea for Two. For jazz fiends and thespians alike.

Location: Black Sheep Theatre, Room 2, Wool Building, University Avenue, Massey University, Manawatu Campus

March 26th MUSIC – Matt Tui, Jazz musicianMulti-instrumentalist Wellington born jazz musician Matt Tui studied classical cello in Dallas, Texas. Matt loves all music, he’ll be making beats, using double bass, keys, and cello through layering loops.

Location: Black Sheep Theatre, Room 2, Wool Building, University Avenue, Massey University, Manawatu Campus

April 2nd      FILM – Dementia: Daughter of Horror, 44 minutesFilm screening and Q&A follows with Donna Hedley, Manager of Alzheimers Manawatu. Daughter of Horror (1955) was directed by Bruno VeSota.

“May be the strangest film ever offered for theatrical release” VARIETY.

Location: Black Sheep Theatre, Room 2, Wool Building, University Avenue, Massey University, Manawatu Campus

April 9th        DRAMA – Yannis SimonidesEmmy Award winner Yannis Simonides presents pieces from Socrates Now Project. Yannis Simonides is internationally acclaimed and is the founder/director of the Greek Theatre of New York. Plato’s timeless classic comes to life in this fascinating one-man show (in English) as a unique cultural experience and political challenge.

Location: Black Sheep Theatre, Room 2, Wool Building, University Avenue, Massey University, Manawatu Campus

For any AOW enquiries contact Karen Newton K.S.Newton@massey.ac.nz

 

Creative Writers and Teachers Converge

New Zealand’s top teachers of creative writing converge on Massey University’s Wellington campus in mid February for a conference that promises to offer new insights into a burgeoning industry.

The Professing Creativity: Teaching Creative Writing in Aotearoa Conference, which takes place from Wednesday February 12 till Friday February 14 is the first conference to focus exclusively on teaching creative writing in New Zealand.

It connects some of the profession’s foremost teachers and writers to discuss issues of biculturalism, the postgraduate experience, and the relationship between creative and critical work.

Featuring some of New Zealand’s most prominent creative writing teachers including Damien Wilkins (Victoria University’s International Institute of Modern Letters), Michele Leggott (Auckland University) and Angie Farrow (Massey University) the conference also includes keynote addresses from Joan Connor (Ohio University, USA) and Kevin Brophy (University of Melbourne).

Conference chairman Dr Thom Conroy, from the School of English and Media Studies, says the conference arose out of an ongoing quest for excellence in teaching and research.

“Professing Creativity will focus on invigorating and innovating the discipline of creative writing in Aotearoa,” he says as well as addressing key questions. “What is the state of creative writing in New Zealand? What standards do we share? Where is the discipline headed and what are we doing about it?”

The Professing Creativity Conference will be held in the Executive Seminar Suite, Entrance A, Massey University, Wellington, from February 12-February 14.

See more at http://www.massey.ac.nz/massey/about-massey/news/article.cfm?mnarticle_uuid=CA2F75D6-053D-6556-8B3C-DCCB08CA09D2

Student Poet wins Kathleen Grattan Award for Poems

Congratulations to postgraduate student Belinda Diepenheim, who has  won The Kathleen Grattan Award for a Sequence of Poems for her sequence “Bittercress and Flax.”

The award is sponsored by the International Writers’ Workshop NZ. The judges were Stu Bagby and Jenny Cole.

This is the second time a Massey postgraduate student has won this award. Jillian Sullivan won it in 2011.

For more information, see the IWW website:
http://www.iww.co.nz/results.htm