Then there are places, like New Zealand, that I return to because I don’t think I will soon be done with the discoveries I can make during my stay. New Zealand is a place best explained by that useful oxymoron, Strangely Familiar. It feels like home, but a home entered from a different door and in which I have an inarguably finite amount of time. So I make time to see friends, visit places, learn about the native literature, art, and natural world without putting any of it off till tomorrow, next week, next month. It feels like a home where they speak my language, but with phrases for which I must seek definitions, and pronunciations I sometimes ask to be spelled. Because the strangely familiar subtly shifts the tectonic plates of experience and expectation upon which I normally stand, I have to daily acknowledge the fact that I’m balancing on moving ground.
Last week I returned to Nelson, a small city on the northern tip of the South Island, a place I visited with Bill and the boys 15 years ago. It was a city enlivened by a burgeoning art scene, heavy on glass and ceramics and wearable art. Its small art gallery had an exhibit of pieces by artists I was moved to contact and interview for a magazine article I was researching on NZ textile artists. It’s also the city whose setting seemed perfectly Kiwi to me, nestled in a turn of Tasman Bay, reachable by a long drive on a twisting two lane road after a three hour ferry ride from the North Island.
Nelson View |
Those interviews resulted not in a published article (the magazine folded) but in close friendships with the artists, one of whom, Ailie Snow (http://ailiesnow.com/), was with me on this trip. A trip we took not by car and ferry but by plane, something we wouldn’t have done 15 years ago when it cost as much to fly to Australia as it did to the South Island. The art scene has been muted, tamped down by a world economy that isn’t directing enough tourists with disposable income to a small city tucked on the Tasman and by a government that has dialed back its support of craft and art. And it is a larger place now, with big box stores and new blank-faced buildings, making it a bit more like everywhere else. But the view from our room recalled the impression of ocean and sky from my previous visit, and my favorite mural was still there, repainted in response to the bleaching effect of the strong NZ light, but still perfectly embodying the feeling of strangely familiar: a landscape that is hyper-real and surreal at the same time, that might be the very manifestation of perfection or the imagined ideal of perfection.
Aotearoa |
This time around, the visit was more about people than about place, as Ailie’s sister-in-law took us to meet her sister, Sally Burton (http://www.sallyburton.co.nz/), a local artist (and like her a Nelsonian from birth), Susanne Williamson, a dyer and clothing maker from the US who washed ashore in the seventies and never left, and various family members and friends with interesting stories to tell. On this visit, as on the last, the circle remained invitingly open when our plane took off for Auckland, inviting a return to the unchanging view, evolving cultural scene, and growing number of people whose stories I’d like to follow here in Nelson.
Need to ask what a gumboot is? Why, it's a wellie. |
Sorry I never caught up with you when you were in Christchurch, Jeannette. Hope to catch up with you at Symposium - I'm only teaching 4 days this time round.
ReplyDeleteShirley
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