Madeleine Slavick / 思樂維 | |
---|---|
Nationality | Hong Kong / Aotearoa / USA |
Known for | writer, photographer |
Notable work | HONG香KONG港SONG嗓, Delicate Access 微妙之途,[1] My Favourite Thing 我最寶貴的 and Fifty Stories, Fifty Images |
Awards | 2015 R.A.K Mason Fellow , 2012 Charles Rooking Carter Awards Finalist, 2003 International Flash Fiction Day Finalist, 1998 Bumbershoot Book Award[2] |
Madeleine Slavick is an American author and photographer[3] who spent twenty-four years in Hong Kong and now lives in New Zealand, and whose work is notable for crossing cultural barriers.[4]
Biography
Madeleine Slavick was born in the United States, moved to Hong Kong where she lived from 1988 to 2012, and then to New Zealand, where she is now based.[5] Her writing and photography have been published and exhibited internationally.[6] She also exhibits with her three artist-sisters, Susanne Slavick, Sarah Slavick, and elin O’Hara slavick.[7]
Reviewer Bradley Winterton in the Taipei Times described Slavick's Delicate Access as having "poise and a terse intelligence" with "nothing unbuttoned" and having a "minimalist concentration."[8] Reviewer Tammy Ho in the Asian Review of Books described her poetry as transforming small and "seemingly insignificant things" into "meaning-loaded symbols."[9] Reviewer Michael Ingham described her poem Mong kok Market, about life in Hong Kong, as depicting the "instant slaughter one cannot avoid witnessing at the live meat and fish stalls."[10]
Slavick has stated, "In the projects I undertake, I try to create a sense of community which enriches me, the other participants, and the audience."[4]
Publications, Exhibitions, Interviews
- Radio New Zealand (RNZ) Interview with Mark Amery, 2023
- Finalist, Parkin Prize, New Zealand, 2022
- Essay 'The Yellow Chair' published in Asian Cha (Hong Kong), Monday Artpost (Toronto), and Guernica (New York), 2022
- 'Madeleine Slavick's Art of Looking' by David Mealing, in EyeContact and PhotoForum, 2021
- Photography published in D-Photo, New Zealand, 2020
- Family Tree Whakapapa – elin o'Hara, Madeleine, Sarah and Susanne Slavick / Exhibition: Aratoi Museum, and Wallace Arts Centre, New Zealand, 2020–2021
- Essay on Family Tree Whakapapa by Erin Kavanagh-Hall
- Writing/Photography published in various New Zealand publications: Art News, Art New Zealand, Blue Five Notebook, Bonsai – Best small stories from Aotearoa New Zealand, Broadsheet, Flash Frontier, Jacket, Love in the Time of Covid, Poetry in Multicultural Oceania, Poetry New Zealand, Sweet Mammalian, Takahe, and Tuesday Poem
- Photography portfolio featured in PhotoForum, New Zealand, with an essay by Janet Bayly, 2019
- Photography exhibited in 2019 Wairarapa Art Review, Selector: Karl Chitham
- Photography published in My Body, My Business: New Zealand sex workers in an era of change (Dunedin: Otago University Press, 2018)
- HONG KONG SONG – solo photography exhibition, The Wallace Arts Centre, Auckland, 2016; and Aratoi Wairarapa Museum of Art and History, Masterton, 2015
- RED – solo photography exhibition, Victoria University of Wellington, 2015
- FIFTY STORIES, FIFTY IMAGES – book of prose and photography, Hong Kong: MCCM Creations, 2012
- GHOST RECORDS – with Luo Hui, published in ArtPost 2010, exhibited in Toronto, 2011
- SOMETHING BEAUTIFUL MIGHT HAPPEN, book of poetry with photography by Shimao Shinzo, Tokyo: Usimaoda Books, 2010[1]
- CHINA VOICES , co-editor, book of non-fiction, Hong Kong: Oxfam, 2010[1]
- MY FAVOURITE THING, curator of exhibition in Hong Kong; co-editor of book of non-fiction, published in Beijing: Joint Publishing, 2005; and Taipei 2006
- DELICATE ACCESS, solo exhibition in Hong Kong; book published with Chinese translations by Luo Hui, Hong Kong: Sixth Finger Press, 2004[1]
- COLO(U)R, ebook, exhibition, postcards, from 2003
- RECONSIDERED CROSSINGS – Representation beyond Hybridity, group exhibition, Hong Kong and Vienna, 2001-2
- ROUND – Poems and Photographs of Asia, poetry and photography exhibition (Hong Kong and Cairo); book published with Barbara Baker in Hong Kong: Asia 2000 Publishers, 1998 [1]
- FLESH & BLOOD – group exhibition in USA from 1997, and in Hong Kong, 2000
- TOGETHER, solo exhibition at five locations in Hong Kong and Singapore, 1996
- Solo exhibition at Hong Kong Fringe Club, 1991
- Daily blog from 2010 – 2014 [1]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Cha: An Asian Literary Journal, Madeleine Marie Slavick, Accessed June 24, 2014
- ↑ City Voices: Hong Kong Writing in English 1945 to the Present, Hong Kong University Press, 2003, Michael Ingham, Xu Xi, Madeleine M. Slavick, see page 318, Accessed June 27, 2014
- ↑ Rosi, Adele (19 November 2001). "Favourite things". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 20 August 2021.
- 1 2 Rosie Milne, 31 Aug 2004, The Telegraph, Hong Kong's poets are crossing cultural barriers, Accessed June 26, 2014, "...Madeleine Marie Slavick was a founder of Sixth Finger Press which published bilingually – in English and Chinese. "...I try to create a sense of community which enriches me..."
- ↑ Slavick, Madeleine. "Tuna, eel". Vice-Versa: a University of Hawai'l ezine. Retrieved 7 October 2023.
- ↑ "Cha: An Asian Literary Journal – Madeleine Marie Slavick". asiancha.com. Retrieved 19 April 2014.
- ↑ Kavanagh-Hall, Erin (5 May 2021). "Sisters add whakapapa to work". Times Age. Wairarapa. Retrieved 20 August 2021.
- ↑ Bradley Winterton (reviewer), Dec 05, 2004, Taipei Times, 'Drink long opinions full of violets': Poet Madeleine Marie Slavick is a contributor to Taiwan magazines and the author of 'Delicate Access', Accessed June 26, 2014, "...Everything about this book spells poise and a terse intelligence. There is nothing unbuttoned, no flavor of Walt Whitman... we find delicacy ... suggestions of intimacies ... and a minimalist concentration.."
- ↑ Tammy Ho, 9 November 2004, Asian Review of Books, Delicate Access by Madeleine Marie Slavick, Accessed June 26, 2014, ".. the poet transforms some small and seemingly insignificant things—a dent in the carpet, a yellow mark on the wall—into meaning-loaded symbols..."
- ↑ 2007, Oxford University Press, Michael Ingham, Hong Kong: A Cultural History, see page 182, Accessed June 26, 2014, "..Slavick depicts the instant slaughter..."