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THE BLAKE POETRY PRIZE

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Exploring the religious and spiritual through poetry

A prize of $5,000 will be awarded to the poem or poems that in the judge’s opinion, best explore the religious and spiritual in poetry. The Blake Poetry Prize is nonsectarian but does expect poems entered will have a recognisable religious or spiritual integrity.

Judges:
Joanne Burns, poet, prose writer, creative writing teacher
David Musgrave, poet, publisher, critic

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WINNER OF THE BLAKE POETRY PRIZE ANNOUNCED

Poet Title of poem
Winner John Watson Four Ways to Approach the Numinous
Highly Commended Philip Salom Mahler and Webb
Dominique Hecq Metaphysics on the Farm
Michelle Cahill Vishvarupa
Shortlisted Fiona Britton Oyster
Brook Emery This Curious Light
Dominique Hecq On alien shores
Jennifer Mills body of water
David Mortimer Rainbow in Black
John Karl Stokes Water-buffalo with concrete freeway

JUDGE'S COMMENTS 

The Blake Poetry Prize is unique in Australia for requiring an engagement with a topic which many poets find challenging: rendering into verse that which cannot be easily articulated without lapsing into lyrical, moral, aesthetic glibness, or received rhetoric. This year’s winning entry, ‘Four Ways to Approach the Numinous’ is an outstanding example of a successful poetic engagement with manifestations of the divine.

‘Four Ways to Approach the Numinous’
This assured and rigorous quartet of poems impressed itself upon the judges as the clear winner. Through four strategies, ‘By the Mystery of Presence’, ‘By Embracing Multiplicity’, By A Devotion to Objects’, ‘By Approaching the River’, the poet scrutinises the notion of the numinous in a compelling manner that ultimately leaves the reader with no clear or comfortable answers. The poetic voice in this quartet draws the reader into each topos in a way that is poetically and intellectually exhilarating. At times the poet plays with the reader’s expectations in a cheeky way, while at the same time maintaining a profound integrity. Tropes in the poems appear seamlessly and are uncannily apt. Each of the poems is individualised by a different stanza/line form. ‘Four Ways to Approach the Numinous’ is an endlessly fascinating and rewarding investigation of the mysteries of presence as they may appear in artworks, memory, landscape and the concept of a master guiding a disciple on a spiritual quest.

The judges decided to highly commend three poems – ‘Mahler and Webb’, ‘Metaphysics on the Farm’, and ‘Vishvarupa’.

‘Mahler and Webb’
This diptych evokes the spiritual with levity and gravity. The movements of Mahler’s Resurrection symphony are imaginatively remixed with an animated procession of ants. In the second poem ‘Reading Francis Webb’, the poem reifies the growth of a spiritual imperative in the figure of the poet Francis Webb during his life in psychiatric institutions. This tautly paced and compassionately insightful poem concludes with an affecting generosity.

‘Metaphysics on the Farm’
In a pastoral setting, everyday reflections on a relationship are transformed into a suggestive meditation on love as eros and love as agape and their relationship to the divine. This is effected through an implied dialogue between the self and an other. The delicate and restrained casualness of this meditation impressed the judges.

‘Vishvarupa’
This triptych, focusing on the three Hindu deities, Ganesh, Krishna and Kali, dazzles with an unusual radiance. It is intimate, amusing, freshly contemporary and politically aware in the imaging of its subjects, while maintaining a more traditional devotional attitude. There is variation in this triptych: the middle poem, ‘Two Souls’, which addresses Krishna, enchants with a quiet lyricism.

- Joanne Burns & David Musgrave

Media enquiries please contact Ian Phipps, IP Publicity, on ian@ippublicity.com.au or 0419 977 649

The Blake Poetry Prize is made possible by the support of Leichhardt Municipal Council, which has a strong commitment to supporting the arts.

Leichhardt Council
About the Blake Society
The Blake Society, named after the visionary artist and poet, William Blake, is an independent organization that administers an annual Exhibition and Prize for contemporary religious and spiritual art. The aim of the Blake Society is to encourage contemporary artists to explore the spiritual in art. The Blake Society was formed at the instigation of a Jesuit priest, Michael Scott and a Jewish businessman, Richard Morley. They hoped that the establishment of a prize would encourage artists of disparate styles and religious allegiances to create significant works of art with religious content. Today its members hope to stimulate the interaction of ideas and spiritual thought across all contemporary artistic media in Australia. The Society is a registered charity with DGR status.

Contact details:

Blake Prize
GPO Box 4484
Sydney NSW 2001

Phone: 02 8230 4228
Email:
info@blakeprize.com.au
Web: www.blakeprize.com.au

NSW Writers' Centre 
PO Box 1056
Rozelle NSW 2039

Phone: 02 9555 9757
Email:
nswwc@nswwriterscentre.org.au
Web: www.nswwriterscentre.org.au

 

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Ó NSW Writers' Centre 2004

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