Monday, July 09, 2012

Leicester Kyle in the NZ Geographic



[NZ Geographic 116 (2012)]


I had an interesting phone conversation a couple of months ago with journalist Kennedy Warne, who was working on an article about the implications of further strip-mining of coal on the West Coast of the South Island. He'd just come across my Leicester Kyle website, and was fascinated - above all - by Leicester's lyrical sequence of protest poems The Great Buller Coal Plateaux (2001).



I'm happy to see that he's included a number of citations from Leicester in the article which has just appeared in the latest issue of New Zealand Geographic, which he was kind enough to send me a copy of (nor is it true that the hirsute creature in the picture above is intended as any kind of satirical reflection on Leicester's own magnificent set of silver whiskers ...). Here's one example, from the beginning of "The Black and the Green":

... Thin, cold, acidic soils and scant nutrients stunt growth. On the Denniston Plateau, life adopts a low profile.

You might expect such a place to have a pinched austerity about it — sour, waterlogged, battered by the elements, a po-faced bog. Yet the land surges with beauty. I walk across it and discover what the late poet Leicester Kyle, from Millerton, just north of here, called an "untrod field of singing flowers". Sprays of pink, insect-devouring sundews mingle with swards of tufting mosses. Each sprigleaf hair is tipped with a single droplet of dew. Crouching at ground level, I gaze across a field of sparkling globes. ...

I thoroughly recommend reading Kennedy Warne's article as a whole. I have to say that it horrified me to discover just how little of the pakihi land Leicester and others were struggling to save a decade ago is left now. The Millerton Plateau is, it seems, pretty much a done deal. The struggle now is to learn from that lesson, and try to avoid the same ecological devastation on the Denniston plateau, a bit further south.



Sunday, June 24, 2012

Jack & Bronwyn's Dunedin Adventure



The view from my brother Jim's window
(Opoho, North East Valley, Dunedin)


I've just spent five days in Dunedin, attending the launch (on Tuesday 19th June) of the MOTH [Museum of True History] show "Fallen Empire" at the Blue Oyster Gallery.

We had a really nice time! The weather was practically perfect (despite various naysaying weather prophets). We hung out with my brother Jim; my niece Catherine; Karl Chitham, whose collection the exhibition came from (I edited the catalogue, and wrote an introduction to it); and also David Howard, my fellow executor of Leicester Kyle's literary estate, from whom I collected the remainder of Leicester's papers.

Here are some pictures - mostly taken by Bronwyn, hence her absence from them, but also a few by David Howard (marked DH), as well as some by my brother Jim (marked JR):

Dunedin Landmarks:



[North East Valley]




[Literary plaques in the Octagon]




[The old synagogue, Moray Place]




[Posters for the show (DH)]


Gallery environs:



[Why do you want to go down there ...?]




['Cause there's a cool little gallery hidden in that alley ...]




[Time for smoko, anyone?]


What is the show?:



[Darkside Gallery, Blue Oyster Art Project Space]




[Only $5 a copy!]




[Gallery samples]


The Theatre:



[Bertolt Wegener's model theatre]




[From the side]




[The back of the stage]




[Jack & theatre]


The Pictures:



[Together]




[Kupe?]




[Calypso]




[Isis]




[Nausikäa?]




[Detail of girl's head]


The Animation:



[Amphora]




[Amphora & symbol]




[Amphora & snakes]




[Jack & animation (DH)]


The Launch:



[Bronwyn & me in background]




[Underneath the arches]




[Bronwyn with Graham Fletcher]


Port Chalmers:



[The church]




[The main street]




[Is it time for coffee yet ...?]




[The - excellent! - Port Royale Café]


Aramoana:



[Beginning of the spit]




[The other end]




[Seaweed grass]




[Karl & Jack]


From the Peninsula:






[The Harbour Cone (JR)]







[Views from Mt. Cargill (JR)]


In the Botanical Gardens:



[Bird fountain]




[Jack with some book purchases]




[Bronwyn admiring the rock gardens]




[What, me worry? (DH)]