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Laureate Award
Ian Wedde
Ian Wedde
ONZM
Poet/Writer
  • Ian Wedde
  • Biography
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  • Ian Wedde New Zealand's 2011-13 Poet Laureate
Related links

Ian at the 2010 Auckland Writers & Readers Festival;

Cultural Icons website: Ian discusses poetry with Kevin Ireland and reads his own poems;
On the NZ Book Council website.

Milestones
  • 1946   
    Born, Blenheim, New Zealand1968
  • 1968
    Graduated University of Auckland, MA in English
  • 1966
    Poems began appearing regularly in journals
  • 1972   
    Burns Fellow, Otago University
  • 1977   
    First novel Dick Seddon's Great Dive wins Book Award for Fiction
  • 1978   
    Spells for Coming Out wins NZ Book Award for Poetry
  • 1994
    Became Arts Project Manager, Museum of NZ - Te Papa Tongarewa
  • 2001   
    General Editor, Ralph Hotere: Black Light, winner - Illustrative Arts section Montana Book Awards
  • 2005   
    Awarded Meridian Energy Katherine Mansfield Memorial Fellowship
  • 2006   
    Fulbright Scholarship
  • 2007   
    Arts Foundation Laureate Award;
    Named as a University of Auckland Distinguished Alumni
  • 2009  
    Auckland University Writer in Residence
  • 2010  
    Queen's Birthday honours - Officer of the said Order (ONZM)

Biography

Ian Wedde - Poet/Writer
ONZM

"Writing is a way of being in the world imaginatively – with greater awareness, enhanced enjoyment, sharper criticality, more curiosity. It's a way of living more intensely, to the max."

Born in Blenheim in 1946, Ian spent the early part of his life living in East Pakistan and England. On returning to New Zealand he attended King's College, Auckland, going on to The University of Auckland, where he gained a MA in English.  From 1966 his poems began appearing regularly in journals, including Landfall and Freed. To date, Ian has published 14 collections of poems, six novels, and a collection of short stories, while his prolific essays in art criticism and cultural studies have been collected in How to be nowhere: essays and texts, 1971-1994 and Making Ends Meet:Essays and Talks 1992-2004.

Ian edited The Penguin Book of New Zealand Verse (1985, with Harvey McQueen) and The Penguin Book of Contemporary New Zealand Poetry (1989, with Harvey McQueen and Miriama Evans). He was the General Editor of Ralph Hotere: Black Light, which won the Illustrative Arts section of the 2001 Montana Book Awards, curated and edited Fomison, What Shall We Tell Them? (1994) and Now See Hear! Art, Language and Translation (1990, with Gregory Burke).

Ian won the 1977 Book Award for Fiction for his first novel, Dick Seddon's Great Dive and shared the 1978 NZ Book Award for Poetry for Spells for Coming Out. He was the Burns Fellow in 1972 and his writing has been further recognised by the Writers' Bursary 1974, the Scholarship in Letters 1980, 1989 and the Victoria University writing fellowship 1984, among other awards. He was a member of the Literary Fund Advisory Committee 1977-79 and of the Queen Elizabeth II Visual Arts Panel in 1990. From 1983 to 1990 he was the art critic for The Evening Post and from 1994 to 2004 Ian was head of art and visual culture at Te Papa. In 2005 he was awarded the Meridian Energy Katherine Mansfield Memorial Fellowship and in the same year published his latest poetry collection Three Regrets and a Hymn to Beauty and Making Ends Meet:Essays and Talks 1992-2004.

Ian was awarded a Fulbright Travel award in 2006, the year he published The Viewing Platform.  He was named among the University of Auckland's Distinguished Alumni in 2007 and in the same year received an Arts Foundation Laureate Award.

Ian resumed writing Chinese Opera, a novel he started twenty years previously and then put aside, only to take up again when he discovered a way back into it. Chinese Opera was published in late 2008.  In 2009 Ian wrote a monograph on the artist Bill Culbert, Bill Culbert: Making Light Work and a poetry collection Good Business.  Both were published by Auckland University Press, and he was honouredwith the University of Auckland Michael King Writer's Residency.

He was made an Officer of the Said Order (ONZM) in the 2010 Queens Birthday honours list.

Ian moved from Wellington to Auckland in 2011 with his partner Donna Malane, a television writer and producer. In the same year, Victoria University Press publuished his novel The Catastrophe.

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