Pukeahu: An Exploratory Anthology Launch

Join us in Wellington on Wednesday 12 August for the launch of an exiting new online anthology.

A  collaboration between staff and students in Massey University’s School of English and Media Studies and the School of Design, produced in partnership with the Alexander Turnbull Library, National Library of New Zealand, Te Puna Mātauranga o Aotearoa.

PUKEAHU: AN EXPLORATORY ANTHOLOGY

Edited by Ingrid Horrocks, Lynn Davidson, Lena Fransham, and Thomas Aitken. Designed by Rosie Percival.
http://pukeahuanthology.org/

The launch will include short readings from 6:30pm by:

Angela Kilford
Lena Fransham
Bill Manhire
Vivienne Plumb
Thomas Aitken
Chris Tse
Lynn Davidson

Date: Wednesday 12 August
Time: Wine and refreshments from 6 pm
Location: Te Ara Hihiko/Block 12, Level C.  Massey University, Entrance E off Tasman Street, Pukeahu/Mt Cook, Wellington

https://www.facebook.com/events/1472480426401008/PukeahuAnthology-electronic-invite-final

Massey 3MT Competition

School of English and Media Studies PhD student Sara McBride has won the Wellington leg of the 3 minute thesis competition.  Sara is co-supervised by English & Media Studies with the Joint Centre for Disaster Research and her research is on cracking the puzzle of how we can better prepare people for disaster, particularly earthquakes.  She’ll be off to the finals in August. Congratulations Sara!

Sara McBrideMore information on the 3MT competition can be found on the Massey University website.

Massey Graduate’s First Poetry Collection Reviewed

A great review of Wellington Massey Expressive Arts graduate, Annabel Hawkins’ first collection of poetry, This Must be the Place:

‘The move from a blog, where the posts were an amalgam of structured poems, as well as open-form entries with no real structure, was a challenge. Here, in This Must be the Place, these have been collected, worked on, revised, and her words are bound together with feelings and memories. The form is stricter, but the intentions and honesty remain in the collection. Hawkins avoids high-brow language and form, aiming instead for accessibility. Her language oscillates, as if working to a pattern, between poeticism surrounding time and abstract emotions, and specific language of both time and place—with references to polar fleeces, durries, skateboards, ripped jeans, Briscoes, all carving out an eternal moment in time.’

If you’d like to read more, click http://bit.ly/1Lm1nCx.

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Massey Tutor’s second film to appear in NZIFF New Zealand’s Best Competition

Madam Black (2015), a short film written by Matthew Harris, tutor at Massey University’s Albany campus, will appear in New Zealand’s Best Competition at the New Zealand International Film Festival on Saturday 25th July, 6:15pm at Sky City Theatre.

Described by selector Christine Jeffs as a “sweet and quirky tale which abounds with charm and humour”, the film tells the story of a wayward glamour photographer who runs over a child’s pet and is forced to fabricate a story about its disappearance.

The film is directed by Ivan Barge and set on Auckland’s North Shore, and it recently had its world premiere at the Chinese Theatre in Hollywood at the Dances With Films festival, where it won the Industry Award and an honourable mention in the Competition Shorts.

“It’s great to have the New Zealand premiere so soon after the international release,” Harris says, “and the New Zealand’s Best event is a great occasion which always has a sell-out crowd – it really shows the public appetite for short-form storytelling.”

The popularity of the NZIFF competition and of other short film festivals around the country, he likens to the recent trend in hors d’oeuvres style dining: “Seeing half a dozen short films is like the tapas of movie-going. Taking slices of life from different plates can be incredibly filling, and it encourages more conversation because you’re not locked into one long narrative. They’re great to go to with friends.”

This is Harris’ second appearance in the NZIFF NZ’s Best line-up. His award-winning 43,000 Feet also featured in the competition in 2012.

His previous short films have travelled the international festival circuit from Tribeca in New York to the Clermont-Ferrand festival in France, accruing various awards and nominations, and his last collaboration with director Ivan Barge on Snooze Time had over 140,000 views in its first week online.  

Tickets for the event go on sale at 9:00am Friday 26th June via Ticketmaster or: http://www.nziff.co.nz/2015/auckland/new-zealands-best-2015/.

Students turn creative lens on dementia

Sue Wilson plays the character Betty, who re-establishes a connection with her 'memory' (photo/Eilidh Penman)

Sue Wilson plays the character Betty, who re-establishes a connection with her ‘memory’ (photo/Eilidh Penman)

Massey University theatre and media students have been using their creative talents for social good by exploring new ways to communicate with people who have dementia, as well as helping others to better understand the condition.

Students at Massey’s Auckland campus have developed short films, music videos and a theatre performance in partnership with a nearby residential care facility, Aria Gardens, in Albany. The works were created as part of a ground-breaking new paper led by applied theatre specialist Dr Rand Hazou.

One of the four groups on the course explored the use of doll therapy for residents experiencing ‘sun-downing’ – the mid to late-afternoon period when some dementia sufferers feel agitated and confused. Another used TimeSlips – an imaginative storytelling technique that doesn’t rely on memory, and is suited to engaging with some of the residents who have dementia.

Dr Hazou says the Creativity in the Community paper – offered through the School of English and Media Studies to Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Communications students – allows students to come up with creative ways to connect with a specific community setting and explore artistic methods to communicate issues relevant to that community.

“By partnering with Aria Gardens, we’ve had a unique opportunity to engage with some of the issues surrounding ageing and dementia, and find creative interventions that challenge negative stereotypes within the wider community,” Dr Hazou says.

“After giving students some introductory information on dementia and some coaching on communication techniques, we began visiting Aria Gardens to meet with residents and staff and build up relationships. The idea was that together we could work towards delivering creative interventions that explore issues of positive ageing and dementia.”

Dr Rand Hazou with students in the Theatre Lab

Dr Rand Hazou with students in the Theatre Lab

Over the last 10 weeks students visited Aria Gardens and designed their creative projects as a result of their interactions with residents. They also worked with Annabel Grant, a clinical educator within Massey’s Institute of Education, to understand the specific communications challenges that the elderly and those with dementia might experience.

Last week the students presented their projects at the Theatre Lab on the Auckland campus.

“We’re also planning on presenting our projects back to the residents and staff at Aria Gardens and inviting feedback and discussion,” Dr Rand says.

Jon Amesbury, the manager of Aria Gardens, says his 133-bed facility seeks innovative and creative ways to empower residents as part of its philosophy. He says the project was “hugely positive.”

“The residents who took part felt really empowered because they were part of creative projects that recognised their lives and experiences, which increases their self-worth.”

Mr Amesbury is entering the project in the national Excellence in Care Awards 2015. He says the project and partnership with Massey University is unique. He would like to see similar creative projects and partnerships developed more widely as the elderly population rapidly increases and issues such as social isolation, grief, sexuality, depression and anxiety they experience need to be addressed and understood.

Dr Hazou says the group creative projects also allow students to develop important teamwork and communications skills that help them to become “work ready and world ready”.

He says the aim of the paper, as well as other new courses being introduced at Massey, is to develop the students’ capacities as adaptive, engaged and responsible citizens. “We want to produce students who can use creative skills to engage with problems they see around them.”

This aim is also being mirrored in Massey’s redesigned Bachelor of Arts, as well as the introduction of the Major in Creative Writing and a Minor in Theatre Studies from next year.

Anna Beaton, a Bachelor of Communications student enrolled in the paper, says the project helped her learn to navigate “confronting” situations with confidence. Her project was a short film aimed to create awareness of dementia using sketching, watercolours, music, and voice-over narration.

Student projects were; ‘Sketchy Memories’ (a three-minute film depicting a narrative fiction based on dementia); ‘Pieces of My Mind’ (a music video on dementia targeting a wide audience); ‘One Moment in Time’ (theatre performance to demonstrate the benefits of doll therapy during the mid to late afternoon period of agitation and confusion in those living with dementia, referred to as ‘sundowning’); and ‘Youthless’ (a short film influenced by elderly residents and their experiences and perspectives on communicative difficulties and memory loss).

Do People Dance When They’re Married? – Auckland Performances

Do People Dance When They’re Married?

A selection of plays by Massey lecturer and playwright Angie Farrow will be performed from 28 – 31 May in Auckland. With a distinctive theatrical style that combines absurdity with lyricism, these short works each explore the themes of intimate relationships and lives left un-lived.

28 – 31 May in the Drama Studio, Arts 1 (Building 206), University of Auckland, Symonds Street, Auckland.

Adult $15
Concession $10
Student $10

For all bookings email uoadramabookings@gmail.com.

Method of payment is CASH only on the night. All tickets must be paid for ten minutes before the performance or they will be resold.

http://www.arts.auckland.ac.nz/…/drama-production–do-peopl…

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Competition Winner – Janet Newman

Master of Creative Writing student, Janet Newman, has won first place in the Page & Blackmore Short Story Competition, run by the Top of the South branch of the New Zealand Society of Authors.  Judge Ted Dawe, commended Janet’s short story “Like Light” for its seamless transition of narration and quality of writing.  Congratulations, Janet!

http://www.topwriters.co.nz/competition-results.html

Script writer shares art of page-to-screen

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Aspiring film scriptwriters will have a chance to hear how to get an idea off the page and onto the screen at a special seminar with scriptwriter Dr Matthew Harris. Dr Harris, a tutor in the School of English and Media Studies at the Auckland campus, is presenting two of his short films in the first of the Arts Out Loud series on creativity this Wednesday (May 20). Film buffs will be treated to screenings of his short films Snooze Time (2014), and 43,000 Feet (2012), which premiered at New York’s Tribeca Film Festival in 2012. It was selected from more than 2,800 submissions and competed with another 58 films from 25 countries.

Dr Harris will talk about the genesis of the ideas for the films, the writing and revision process of the scripts, and elements of the production that bear on the translation from the page to screen. He will also comment on the thematic link between the films: human perceptions of time. “I’ll be talking about where my ideas come from and how I got into writing. And also about the research that’s part of the writing process,” he says. He has “always been fascinated by time and how people experience time.”

Dr Harris’ films have travelled the international festival circuit from Tribeca in New York to the Clermont-Ferrand Festival in France, accruing various awards and nominations. His short fiction and poetry has been published variously in New Zealand and abroad. His nine-minute film 43,000 Feet is a mix of live action and animation with an interior monologue voiced by Peter Bryant to convey the thoughts of statistician John Wilkins as he falls to Earth. He calculates he has exactly three minutes and 48 seconds before impact, formulating a plan for hitting the ground and rehearsing what he will say to media on the off chance he survives.

“It’s about the different kinds of time we experience, from the agonisingly slow (morning-after-time, microwave-time) to the truly chaotic – such as the contradictory-time of old age, when the days seem to crawl by but Christmas comes around faster each year.”

His latest short film Madam Black, about a glamour photographer who runs over a child’s pet and is forced to fabricate a story about its disappearance, has been selected for the Dances with Films festival (May 28-June 7) in Hollywood. Madam Black begins its festival run on Saturday, 30 May at the Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles, competing for ‘Best Short’ in the Dances With Films festival.

He is currently working on a feature-length fictionalised documentary about the curious history of the Christmas carol O Holy Night, which was allegedly written by a professed atheist. Dr Harris graduated with a PhD in New Zealand fiction at Massey’s Auckland campus in 2012. Find out more about his work here, and a blog on his films here.

Arts Out Loud is co-ordinated by Dr Rand Hazou and Dr Jack Ross from the School of English and Media Studies, which is introducing a new major in Creative Writing in the Bachelor of Arts next year.

Event details:

‘From page to screen’ with Dr Matthew Harris: May 20, 12.30-1.30: Theatre Lab, Sir Neil Waters Building.

A storyboard from Dr Matthew Harris’ short film Snooze Time.