New Laureate announced on Poetry Day
New Laureate announced on Poetry Day
Vincent O’Sullivan is New Zealand’s new Poet Laureate.
“The Poet Laureate Advisory Group received some excellent nominations but was unanimous in its choice of Vincent to succeed Ian Wedde for the two-year Laureate term,” said Advisory Group chair and Alexander Turnbull Library Chief Librarian, Chris Szekely.
“Vincent O’Sullivan has been a leading figure in New Zealand and International poetry for over 40 years and his work continues to develop, with excellent reviews for his most recent anthology of new work, Us,Then, published only last month.”
“Nominators mentioned his wide appeal and ability to relate to range of audiences with warmth, wit and erudition. I have no doubt he will be an articulate and intelligent voice for the role and meaning of poetry.”
From its inception in 1997 through to 2007 the Laureates have been: Bill Manhire, Hone Tuwhare, Elizabeth Smither, Brian Turner and Jenny Bornholdt. Since 2007, when the National Library of New Zealand took over the appointment of the Poet Laureate, the Laureates have been Michele Leggott, Cilla McQueen and Ian Wedde
The Laureate will be officially welcomed into the post by Internal Affairs Minister Chris Tremain at a ceremony at the National Library in Wellington next month.
Vincent O’Sullivan joins six other Dunedin poets at a public reading to mark New Zealand Poetry Day at Port Chalmers Library tonight (Friday 16 August) 6.30pm – 8.00pm.
For more about the New Zealand Poet Laureate: http://nzpoetlaureate.natlib.govt.nz/
Biography
Vincent O’Sullivan
born in Auckland in 1937 is a poet, short story writer,
novelist, playwright, critic and editor.
A graduate from
the universities of Auckland (1959) and Oxford (1962), he
lectured in the English departments of Victoria University
of Wellington (1963–66) and (after several months in
Greece) the University of Waikato (1968–78), before
committing himself to full-time writing.
He served as
literary editor of the NZ Listener (1979–80), and
then (1981–87) won a series of writer’s residencies and
research fellowships in universities in Australia and New
Zealand, interrupted by a year as resident playwright at
Downstage Theatre, Wellington (1983). In 1988 he resumed his
academic career as professor of English at Victoria
University of Wellington.
Since 2004 he has been Emeritus
Professor in the School of English and Film Studies at
Victoria, but is now based in Dunedin. The winner of many
literary prizes, including the Prime Minister’s Award for
Literary Achievement for Poetry in 2006, he was the
Katherine Mansfield Memorial Fellow in Menton in 1994, and
the first writer-in-residence at Henderson House in
Alexandra in 2007.
Nomination comments
2013:
Stephen Stratford:
What astonishes is the
sustained vigour, wit, technical facility, emotional and
intellectual range and, increasingly, warmth. From the
Butcher poems of 1977 to the latest “uneasy pieces” in
tribute to Allen Curnow, the voice is unmistakable. We have
cerebral poets, amusing poets, inventive poets, political
poets, sensitive poets – but no one else who does it
all.’
Brian Turner:
His work is
wide-ranging in content and tone; you get wit, poignancy,
satire, erudition and mastery of the NZ vernacular. He’s
the real thing. And a straight shooter…fluent and
unaffected.
Cilla McQueen:
Vincent has
been part of my personal poetic landscape since the
1960’s. Although he has published many academic works of
great value in his career, it is as a poet that I see him,
and feel that he still has a good deal more to say to
us…..
David Howard:
For over half a
century, alongside distinguished publications in fiction,
non-fiction and drama, Vincent O’Sullivan has produced
poetry that speaks with gracious authority about the human
consequences of partial knowledge.
ends