Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Murder in the Library

This was the title for the Ngaio Marsh biography book launch which we went to after work last night. Joanne Drayton, the author was in attendance and after the usual glass of chardonnay we settled down to an interesting lecture on the history of the crime fiction genre and Ngaio's place in it. I had bought a volume of the dictionary of New Zealand biography recently and was reading the article on Seager who was the superintendent of Sunnyside Mental Institution in the early days (1863-1887) and it was mentioned in that article that Ngaio Marsh was his granddaughter. I spoke to Joanne Drayton before the talk and asked her about the connection and she thought that Ngaio's love of theatre and the way she interacted and mentored her students would have been similar to the enlightened attitude that Seager had for his patients and his use of theatre and drama as therapy in those times when being in prison or a mental hosptial was so harsh. There was a display of Ngaio's crime fiction from the library's collection and I took one of the ones set in New Zealand out to read over the weekend. Will have to read Joanne's book to find out more about her life.

Stayed in Auckland last weekend and went to the Art Gallery to a tour of the latest exhibition Landscape and Light given by the curator Ron Brownson. This is landscape in a wide sense of the word and covers a lot of media. It is a very interesting exhibition and it was good to see some new works (Ava Seymour photocollages of state houses, and, punks in 1960s K Rd as well as old familiar ones ( a Colin McCahon painting of Takaka night and day , another, part of his Urewera mural, a Charles Blomfield one of the Waitomo Caves, a Bill Hammond painting of birds waiting to be stuffed in Buller's studio).

Rushed from there via McDonald's to St Patrick's to take in most of organ concert by Douglas Mews. It was good to hear the organ resounding loudly to the strains of two Brahms Choral preludes and other works (we didn't have a programme and have forgotten the rest of the composers and titles of the works we heard).

This month and next month there are 4 or more concerts in St Patrick's - choral and organ which will be good too go to too.

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