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ABOUT THE EMERGING WRITERS' FESTIVAL
Emerging from what?
(Or what’s in a name)
e·merg·ing adj.
Newly formed or just coming into prominence; emergen.t Come up or out into view (from water, enclosed space., obscurity)
As any business will attest, your name is your brand, it’s the starting
point of your marketing, your promotion and in many ways your success
is linked with the name. is it the same with Arts Organisations? Maybe.
Maybe not. In the months at the helm of the Emerging Writers Festival I
have reflected on this questions as I have fretted about the name of
the festival, is it the right one? Is there a more apt title for who we
really are and what exactly is emerging?
My own experiences with being an emerging artist have all involved
grant categories and communications with program officers at various
places that like to invest in the Arts. In fact I have distinct memory
of one such Program officer telling me I wasn’t Emerging anymore I had
Emerged. Yippee I thought, and then wondered how that was worked out?
Body of work? Amount of income? Number of Grants I had submitted? Is
emerging in fact just a term that has been bequeathed to the Arts
industry by funding bodies as a convenient category? As with the other
terms I have heard including mid career artist and late term artists.
Maybe we should embrace this categorizing and make it a little bit more
literal, maybe we should all be part of a day? There would be early
morning for the youth sector, pre lunch for the emerging and bedtime
for those who are finishing their careers. This would make me around
about afternoon tea.
The other problem I have with the title emerging is it often denotes
young, which is fine generally, but I started in my career at 27 and
while younger at the time, I couldn’t have been called young and
emerging. For the EWF we are an all ages festival, celebrating the fact
that writers can move from aspiring to doing at any age so the title
may confuse our participants.
In the plus side for the Emerging title is the fact that we explore the
newer forms, you could of course call them the emerging forms of
writing. The EWF aims to explore, discuss and examine what will be the
new forms of writing, and through our festival of ideas sessions
arguing the now issue for writing. We aim as a festival to be active
and not reactive a big call but our history has shown we have been
ahead of the game with what we have looked at. Thus yes, we are an
Emerging Writers festival
The sealer for me on why the name is the best name for the festival at
this time is that we aim to be a community festival, a community of
writers of all genres, of all ages and of all backgrounds who, for one
weekend manage to leave our writing spaces and interact with each
other, to inspire each other and to remember that however isolated we
feel, there are many many others who are out there,, all of whom we
meet when the emerge from their writing locales and descend on the
Melbourne Town hall
David Ryding
Director
FESTIVAL STAFF
David Ryding - 2008 Director
David
has worked as director, dramaturge and arts worker, working
consistently with new Australian writers. He was most recently Artistic
Director for Mainstreet Theatre Company, a company dedicated to new
Australian writing about Regional Australia. While with them he
directed Waiting, Welcome to Paradise and the multi award winning The Sad Ballad of Penny Dreadful. Recent freelance directing work includes Stories of Suburban Road for the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts, fourplay for Act o Matic 3000 and Dogs Barking for Perth Theatre Company
Prior to his role with Mainstreet, he was Associate Director for Barking Gecko, for whom he wrote Sarenas Song, Hot Dogs and Littlest Bird, which toured Western Australia in 2004. He also assisted Grahame Gavin on Mice, Own Worst Enemy and 1001 Nights, and directed The Rodeo Kid and The Buzz
(in 2002, 2003 and 2004) as well as managing all of Barking Gecko’s
many and varied participation and community programs, a highlight of
which was the award winning Leonora Project, a two-year Community Cultural development project in the Western Australian mining town of Leonora.
David
has also sat on the Black Swan Theatre Companies BSX Youth theatre,
I-gnites Editorial Committee and the City of Yarra Arts Advisory Board.
He has conducted Community Cultural Development programmes in Broome,
Kalgoorlie and Denmark and taught script writing across Western
Australia as part of the WA State Literature Centres Writers on the Road program. In a former life he was a Youth Worker and ran camps for the YMCA.
Email: director (at) emergingwritersfestival.org.au
Volunteering
There are plenty of opportunities to get some hands-on festival
experience. In 2007 the festival's success was made possible by
35 hard working volunteers. Stay tuned for volunteer opportunities
in 2008 by joining the EWF elist.
EMERGING WRITERS' FESTIVAL BOARD
Angela Woods - Chair
Angela lectures and tutors in the Department of English with Cultural
Studies at the University of Melbourne, and is the Melbourne Expeience
Coordinator at the universitiy's School of Graduate Studies. She
has recently been awarded her PhD: an analysis of the way schizophrenia
has been represented in clinical and cultural theory. Angela has
published articles on the connections between schizophrenia and
cyborgs, terrorism and fascist corporeality; she has also been an
editor and symposia-convenor for Australia’s longest-running
postgraduate journal, antiTHESIS. When let loose from the ivory
tower, Angela worked as an Editorial Advisor for ABC Arts Television.
Christian Gusner - Treasurer
Christian is Director of Corporate Services for MLC, an independant
private school in Melbourne. He has 22 years of broad strategic
and commercial experience in education, banking, legal services,
not-for-private organisations and private companies. Christian has
skills in strategic marketing and planning, budgeting and performance
monitoring and best practice governance.
Lorien Kaye - Secretary
Lorien has worked in and around the book industry for 10 years.
She currently freelances as a writer, editor and researcher on all
things book-ish. Her most regular gig is reviewing two books a week
for The Age, and her commissions have ranged from editing a book
on street art to compiling a potted history of Australian bookselling
over 80 years. She is a former editor of Australian Bookseller &
Publisher and the Weekly Book Newsletter, trade publications covering
all aspects of the book industry. As the inaugural recipient of
the Unwin Trust UK–Australian Fellowship, she spent three
months in London researching the UK book industry.
Ross Karavis
Ross Karavis is a former marketing coordinator at RMIT University,
director of the Antipodes Festival, the Australian Greek arts and
cultural festival and the Chinese New Year Festival. Ross has extensive
broadcasting experience as well as tertiary sector experience, including
managing the Masters in Creative Writing and the Doctor of Creative
Writing at UTS, Sydney. He has also worked for the Australian Publishers'
Association, organising industry training courses and their annual
Book Design Awards. Academic qualifications include a BA (Hons)
in Politics and History from Flinders University, a Master of Arts
in Journalism from the University of Technology, Sydney and Ross
is one day hoping to finish his Masters in Gastronomy from the University
of Adelaide. Ross has been Secretary of the Express Media Management
Committee since November 2005.
Rohini Sharma
Rohini Sharma is CEO of Kultour, a national multicultural arts touring network. Rohini was Artistic Director of Express Media from 2005 - 2007, and Producer of the 2006 and 2007 Emerging Writers' Festivals. Pervious to moving to Melbourne Rohini spent four years working in London for Arts Council England and a small independent Indian Film Festival. In a former life Rohini was involved in theatre as a producer, performer, director, general-dogsbody and finally as a writer. Her plays have been workshopped by the ANPC, performed in Canberra, Hobart, Melbourne, Sydney and London. Rohini has been writer-in-residence at Canberra Youth Theatre and written for arts magazines. Rohini has a BA (Hons) in Drama from ANU and a Graduate Diploma in Professional Writing from Canberra University.
Joel Becker
Joel has been Director of the VWC since 2002 after thirty years
as a bookseller, freelance writer and editor, and cultural project
manager. He has written regular columns for The Sydney Morning
Herald, Cairns Post and Western Advocate, and co-authored a book
for Choice Publications. His clients have included Gleebooks, Readings,
Currency Press, the Australian Foundation for Culture and the Humanities
(now AbaF) and the Australia Council for the Arts. Joel is immediately
past-President of the Arts Industry Council. He is currently on
the Writers & Readers Committee at the State Library, the Boards
of Free Speech Victoria and Emerging Writers’ Festival. Joel
is also President of the Fairfield Primary School Council and has
been on the judging panels of the Premiers Literary Awards and the
State Library Creative Fellowships.
Sophie Cunningham
Sophie Cunningham worked in publishing for 15 years. She
now works as a writer and journalist. She was a founder of Loud:
the Media Festival of Youth Culture and the Arts and has sat on
a range of arts boards and committees. Her first novel, Geography,
was published in 2004 and her second, Bird is due out next year.
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