 |
 |
|
|
Julian
Opie Installation Chambers St, NYC
|
|
TO NEW ZEALAND EDGE
GLOBAL COMMUNITY
From Brian Sweeney, producer, The New
Zealand Edge
America is my second favourite country to be in. It both
magnetizes and repels through its dichotomies of excellence and excess,
creativity and craziness, invincibility and vulnerability, scale and
insularity. Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath has people in America
reeling in a multitude of ways. Outcomes will run deep, wide and
unexpected. This is meaningful for NZ because our relationship with
America has some profound edges flowing into the past, present and future.
Just as we look at the USA and see opportunity, America needs NZ in some
unusually strategic ways. The relationship cannot be reduced to slogans
and clichés by either country. We have much to build together, which is
why two NZ initiatives in America being launched today have much
significance – New Zealand magazine throughout the USA, and Black Grace
in New York.
NEW ZEALAND MAGAZINE LAUNCHES IN THE USA
Walk into your local Barnes & Noble or Borders store today and ask for
New Zealand magazine. The product of the heart and head of Auckland-based
American Kiwi Marty Behrens, New Zealand magazine presents an intelligent
and sophisticated view of this country to North Americans in a whole new
way. Part travel guide, cultural journal and pleasure-seeker's handbook,
the magazine revels in qualities that make New Zealand unique, and digs
deeper into what makes New Zealand so attractive to Americans and
Canadians. The inaugural issue features the “emerging super-city”
(that’s Auckland); Richard Taylor and the wonders of Weta; Joe Bennett
on the bach; Graham Scott and David Teece on the implications of the
radical economic reforms in New Zealand from 1985; a visit to Waipara’s
wine and culinary delights; Michael Campbell; Wearable Arts; Maori
Asparagus; Koru design…check out www.nzmag.com
to subscribe and if you’re stateside go to your nearest quality magazine
store.
BLACK GRACE ON 42 ND ST
From this Friday, September 16 for three weeks, New Yorkers will have the
chance to revel in the performances of Auckland’s seven-member
powerhouse of Pacific Island and Maori dance, Black Grace, as they stomp,
soar and tumble through fierce choreography that fuses contemporary styles
with traditional island dance forms. Black Grace will light-up the New
Victory Theater following an outstanding return season at the Jacob’s
Pillow Dance Festival in Massachusetts. “Never before has this reviewer
seen a group of male dancers who seemed so gentle yet breathtakingly
virile,” raved Boston Globe correspondent Karen Campbell. “The
NZ-based all-male troupe can rock the house with thundering stomps, macho
body slaps in syncopated rhythms, and acrobatics that send the dancers
crashing into one another. Yet they can just as convincingly sing in sweet
three-part harmony, accompanying their vocals with gestures that softly
curve and dip.” Go boys! Tickets for Black Grace can be ordered by
visiting Telecharge.com or by calling 212.239.6200. Tickets are also on
sale at the New Victory box office (209 West 42nd Street, just west of
Broadway).
http://www.blackgrace.co.nz/
NEW: "MAGNIFICENT BEYOND ALL
DESCRIPTION"
Said E.A Montague of the Manchester Guardian of the 1500 metres final at
the 1936 Berlin Olympics presided over by an ascendant Fuehrer: "It
was a race magnificent beyond all description …There never was such a
run nor such a runner." The commentator, Harold Abrahams famously,
lost his BBC poise and broke every broadcasting rule: "Lovelock
leads! Lovelock! Lovelock! Cunningham second, Beccali third. Come on,
Jack! A hundred yards to go! Come on, Jack!! My God, he's done it. Jack,
come on! … Lovelock wins. Five yards, six yards, he wins. He's won.
Hooray!!" Writers searched for phrases to describe Lovelock's genius:
his alluring mix of frail grace with the sudden destructive strike;
floating power delivered with a devastating secret sprint. Afterwards he
was exultant. It was not merely the race of a season, but the race of a
lifetime. Lovelock meticulously kept a diary and in the entry of day of
the race, he recorded, in a moment of rare flamboyance: "It was
undoubtedly the most beautifully executed race of my career, a true climax
to 8 years of steady work, an artistic creation."
nzedge’s editor-at-large Paul Ward re-stokes our Edge
Heroes selection with a 2,500 word essay on the life and triumphs of Jack
Lovelock, born in Crushington, near Reefton on the West Coast of the South
Island, in 1910. The story carries the best collection of
Lovelock-in-action pictures gathered anywhere on the web.
http://www.nzedge.com/heroes/lovelock.html
NEW: 100+ DESIGN HEROES
I was asked by Dorenda Britten to write an article about New Zealand
design heroes for her designindustry site. Pressed for time, I did the
only sensible thing I could and wrote a list. There are few
"designers" on the list; what they all share is an edge
aesthetic that for me is what design is all about. Edge is about how the
periphery influences the centre by way of new ideas, new forms and new
aesthetics. Beautiful global ideas and performance achievements laced with
edge. My New Zealand design heroes are a broad group of innovators who
inspire the view that creativity, originality and performance are embedded
in our culture. Here are just over 100 people from both our history and
contemporary life who in their own ways have been world-changing. Cheers
to Ian Axford, Clarence Beeby, Marie Clay, Geoffrey Cox, Bruce Farr, Bill
Hamilton, Bill Gallagher, Vaughan Jones, David Low, Len Lye, Margaret
Mahy, Rosalie Gascoigne, Fred Hollows, Ivan Mauger, Kiri, Bill Phillips,
Ronald Syme, Titokowaru, Robert Webster, Yvette Williams and
company.
http://www.nzedge.com/heroes/design_heroes.htm
NEW: GLOBAL NEWS ABOUT NEW ZEALANDERS
Stories from the wires at http://www.nzedge.com/media
| •
|
All Black’s bring home Tri-Nations and Bledisloe
Cups
|
| •
|
Four golds for NZ Rowing team at World Champs
|
| •
|
NZ voted “best country in the world” – Conde
Nast
|
| •
|
Black Grace encore at Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival
|
| •
|
Toi Maori exhibition in San Francisco
|
| •
|
Canterbury sportswear enters the US market
|
| •
|
The modernist homes of architect David Hovey
|
| •
|
Pink Floyd Experience causes South African frenzy
|
| •
|
Fox buys Touchdown’s Reality TV programs
|
| •
|
Long White Cloud has silver lining for Britons
|
NEW: WATCHING OUT FOR THE WILY WELSH
Kevin Roberts’ Rugby Postcard: KR teams up with Moffo aka rugby CEO
extraordinaire David Moffett in St Tropez to scheme the Grand Slam All
Blacks vs Wales test in Cardiff on November 5. “The Millennium Stadium
is already sold out with a record 74,500 spectators assured. The game will
celebrate 100 years of Test Rugby between the two nations since that
slow-moving referee disallowed Deans' try from a distance of 20 metres.
Oh, for video replays.”
http://www.nzedge.com/features/rugby/05_Sept.htm
NEW: PASIFIKA STYLES
Maori and Pacific Island art and culture take centre stage at the
University of Cambridge from April 2006 with the launch of the Pasifika
Styles project. A major exhibition showcasing the work of young New
Zealand artists will feature alongside one of the largest collections of
Pacific artefacts in the United Kingdom. The project runs for over a year
and involves artist-led workshops, talks, performances and a major
festival of Pacific performing arts.
http://www.nzedge.com/features/ar-pacifika_styles.html
NEW: LINKS TO EDGY STUFF
We have added new sites to our Links page:
| •
|
The New Zealand
Institute: think-tank for big NZ solutions
|
| •
|
Leaf Salon: forum for NZ book
news, reviews and events
|
| •
|
Public Address: nz blog-central with Hard News,
Cracker
|
| •
|
NZ Wikipedia: citizen encyclopedia full of detail and delight
|
| •
|
Te Ara: official encyclopedia, a journey through ourselves
|
| •
|
The Big Idea:
online community for NZ creative industry
|
| •
|
Spacific: Aotearoa
music/culture collective from the UK
|
| http://www.nzedge.com/links/
|
BEATRICE’S BRIGHT STAR
Check out the Circa Theatre production in Wellington of one of our
original nzedge Heroes, cosmologist Beatrice Tinsley. “A moving and
fascinating story about the clash between love and ambition. One of the
most creative and significant theoreticians in modern astronomy, her work
profoundly affected what scientists know about the origin and size of the
universe. But in the male dominated astronomical establishment of the
1960s and 70s Beatrice had to struggle against the accepted wisdom to
prove that the universe is open, not closed. She proved to be right - but
her success came at a great personal cost.” By Stuart Hoar, directed by
Susan Wilson. http://www.circa.co.nz/whatson/
http://www.nzedge.com/heroes/tinsley.html
Have a big Saturday night.
BRIAN SWEENEY
Producer, The New Zealand Edge
www.nzedge.com
brian@nzedge.com
To unsubscribe, hit reply, enter UNDO in the Subject
line and then Send.
|

|