Event (Dunedin): Poetry After Hours (Updated with Photos)
On the 11th of June David read alongside Robyn Maree Pickens, Loveday Rose Why, and Orchid Tierney at the Indigo Room, Dunedin, NZ. Some images from the event below:
On the 11th of June David read alongside Robyn Maree Pickens, Loveday Rose Why, and Orchid Tierney at the Indigo Room, Dunedin, NZ. Some images from the event below:
On the 11th of June David will read alongside Robyn Maree Pickens, Loveday Rose Why, and Orchid Tierney at the Indigo Room, Dunedin, NZ.
On the 18th of April David spoke at the New Zealand High Commission in London. The event was chaired by Roy Cross, who writes:
“The week before last, I had the great pleasure of chairing a reading by David Howard, a New Zealand poet who should be much better known in the UK. David has written a wonderful sequence of poems, Mate (which is a Dalmatian name, pronounced Maat-eh, not a greeting!), about the encounter between Dalmatian immigrants to Aotearoa and the local Māori people at the turn of the century. Each poem in the sequence is told from the perspective of a different member of the Petricevich family.”
A PDF of the complete sequence with explanatory notes can be found on Roy’s site here, or as a direct download here. Below, some photographs from the event.
(Images supplied by Istros Books)
On the 18th of April David will be speaking at the New Zealand High Commission in London. Tickets (free) are available here. Press release reproduced below.
The inspiration behind David's cycle of poems, Mate, is the history of Dalmatian immigrants to NZ in the early 20th century, who were mostly employed digging kauri gum for the roads in the North Island. Many of them ended up marrying Māori women and the name given to them, and their descendants, is 'Tarara".
The NZ poet David Howard wrote the poetic cycle 'Mate' based on this subject following on from a residency at the Writers’ House in Pazin, Croatia (where he now lives). Following receipt of a Creative New Zealand Resilience Grant, he was supported by the Dalmatian Cultural Society. The work's main critical influences are the masters and doctoral theses of Senka Bozic-Vrbancic, the latter expanded into Tarara: Croats and Māori in New Zealand: memory, belonging, identity (Otago University Press, 2008).