Novelist Chloe Lane and multi-award-winning writer and editor Lee Murray have been announced as Grimshaw Sargeson
Fellows for 2021.
Lane will take on the fellowship first, starting in April 2020. Writing was not Lane’s first career choice, but quickly
emerged as her leading creative talent while studying fine arts.
“I started writing when I was an undergraduate student at Elam. Initially I wrote about my art and things I saw in
galleries and soon realised this received more interest from my teachers and peers than any of the art I produced. I
think that was when I decided maybe I’d chosen the wrong instrument,” says Lane.
Her fellowship project is a novel set in New Zealand and Florida that explores motherhood and marriage in the shadow of
a small-town murder. The main tension comes from the narrator's relationship with her husband, and how it has changed
since the arrival of the couple's young son.
“The Grimshaw Sargeson Fellowship has a brilliant reputation, having already supported some excellent New Zealand
writers, so naturally it was on my radar. During the fellowship I will continue to work on my second novel. I am
currently just past the midway point with a first draft, and my plan is to get it to the finish line by the end of the
fellowship,” continued Lane.
The second Fellow, Lee Murray, is a multi-award-winning writer and editor of science fiction, fantasy, and horror, with
many international titles for adults and children. She is New Zealand's most awarded writer in these genres.
“I cried when I received the news. Just the thought of being counted among the award recipients, a who’s who of New
Zealand literature, is a dream for any Kiwi writer. The Fellowship is such a wonderful opportunity. It will allow me
some time to focus solely on my poetry collection, and without distractions,” says Murray.
For her fellowship project Murray will draw on her experience growing up as a third-generation Chinese New Zealander to
research and write a series of prose poems based on real life narratives which explore Chinese women's diaspora in a New
Zealand setting, including some of her own family stories. The working title is Fox Spirit On A Distant Cloud. She will look at the sense of otherness and alienation experienced by Chinese women since Chinese immigrants first
came to this country.
Sargeson Trust Chair Dr Elizabeth Aitken-Rose says there was a very good field of applicants this year and the demand
proves how valuable this Fellowship is.
“The Sargeson Trust is delighted to have Chloe and Lee for the 2021 Grimshaw Sargeson Fellowship. The quality of
applications was excellent, and the strong interest reflects the value the Grimshaw Sargeson Fellowship offers writers,
to have the time and space to develop their work.”
This distinguished literary fellowship allows the pair to share an annual stipend of $20,000 and a four-month tenure
each at the Sargeson Centre in Auckland. Lane will take up the first four months of the Fellowship, beginning in April,
and Murray will begin her stint in August.
About Grimshaw & Co
Grimshaw & Co are leaders in dispute resolution, with experience across all areas of civil and commercial litigation. Established
in 2005, Grimshaw & Co are based in Auckland, representing clients across the country.About the Frank Sargeson Trust
The Frank Sargeson Trust was formed in 1983 by Christine Cole Catley, Frank Sargeson’s heir and executor. The Trust aims
to continue Sargeson’s lifelong generosity to writers through providing residential fellowships while preserving his
house in Takapuna, Auckland, as New Zealand’s first literary museum. The first fellowship was awarded to Janet Frame in
1987. Learn more about Frank Sargeson and the Fellowship here.