Showing posts with label tokotoko. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tokotoko. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

photos from matahiwi and hastings

Te Matau a Maui (The Hook of Maui), the wharenui at Matahiwi Marae with carved representations of Maui’s family on the paepae (forecourt)


Maui hooking Te Ika, the big fish of Aotearoa New Zealand


John Buck addresses manuhiri and tangata whenua at Matahiwi


Guests with Jacob Scott at Matahiwi


Penny Carnaby, National Librarian, and Hon Judith Tizard with the two tokotoko


Michele Leggott with matua tokotoko and Te Kikorangi, the blue stick


Jacob Scott and poets at the mouth of the Tukituki river


Pipi Café – poets and poetry-loving people


Same again, another table


Pipi Café – more poets


I Say Te Mata: Jack Ross at the Hawke’s Bay Opera House Assembly Room


I Say Te Mata: Selina Tusitala Marsh



I Say Te Mata: poets and tokotoko

Thursday, February 21, 2008

laureates, locals and out of town poets in Hawkes Bay

Drums are beating, email is running hot and phonecalls are criss-crossing the land as the folk at the National Library coordinate the first Laureate event for 2008 in Hawkes Bay. NatLib, Te Mata Estate Wines, Matahiwi Marae, Scott Design, Creative Hastings and the Hawkes Bay Opera House are all working towards Saturday 23 February when the new matua tokotoko (carved speaking stick) will be presented at Matahiwi Marae in a ceremony that will also honour the achievements of Hone Tuwhare. Laureate Elizabeth Smither will be there, as will a host of readers and speakers with words, stories and songs for Hone. This is Poetry at the Pa, Matahiwi-style, 10 am to 2 pm.

In the evening the focus shifts to the Opera House in Hastings for I Say Te Mata: Poets at the Assembly Room. Keith Thorsen and I will co-host, starting at 8 pm with a glass of Te Mata and processing through the line-up of poets in town for the event. Some young Hawkes Bay talent should give laureates and others a taste of the poetic future and we’re expecting to have a very good time indeed. Anyone left standing will be directed to Dancing on the Green, running till midnight at nearby Kohupatiki Marae.

So we’re fine-tuning our offerings and packing toothbrushes and sleeping bags here in Auckland in anticipation of the Great Poetic Hikoi to the Bay. Some are flying, others driving; but we’ll all be there as the action gets underway. Look, isn’t that the National Library bus pulling in from Wellington with a bunch of poetry-loving librarians hanging out the windows?

Friday, January 18, 2008

16 January 2008: Death of Hone Tuwhare


Hone Tuwhare (1922-2008) was the second Te Mata Poet Laureate. He was appointed in 1999, received his carved tokotoko from PM Helen Clark and published Piggyback Moon, his laureate collection, in 2001. Hone’s tokotoko is now held at the Eastern Southland Museum.


Three classic poems by Hone Tuwhare - Hone Tuwhare website

Publications and reviews list - University of Auckland Library website

'Friend', published in Te Ao Hou (1964)


Three poems published in Te Ao Hou (1959) (scroll down a little on the page to see)

Feature on Tuwhare in Te Ao Hou (1964) A selection of early work from the digitised journal Te Ao Hou.

Fifteen Minutes in the Life of Johannes H. Jean Ivanovich A poem about laundry day at Kaka Point, Hone-style. Published in Shape-Shifter (1997) and reprinted in Whetu Moana: Contemporary Polynesian Poems in English (2003).

LP Blues Debra Smith’s photograph documenting Hone Tuwhares contribution to Poetry on the Pavement in the Auckland CBD, February 2005.

Biography and publications NZ Book Council Writer Files Images (from the International Institute of Modern Letters website)
Top: Prime Minister Helen Clark and Hone Tuwhare
Bottom: Hone's tokotoko

Post about Tuwhare on the National Library's 'Create Readers' blog


Information and links on the Christchurch City Libraries site