41°16′42.9″S 174°46′6.2″E / 41.278583°S 174.768389°E / -41.278583; 174.768389
Randell Cottage Writers' Residency | |
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Randell Cottage, 2021
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Awarded for | Writing |
Location | Thorndon, Wellington |
Country | New Zealand |
Presented by | Randell Cottage Writers' Trust |
Reward(s) | Rent-free accommodation and stipend |
First awarded | 2002; 22 years ago (2002) |
Website | www |
The Randell Cottage Writers' Residency is a literary residency in New Zealand. It is awarded annually to one New Zealand writer and one French writer, comprising six months' rent-free accommodation at Randell Cottage in Wellington and a stipend (as of 2021[update] set at NZ$27,450).[1] The recipients are usually mid-career writers.[2] The cottage itself is listed with Heritage New Zealand.
The residency is based at Randell Cottage in the suburb of Thorndon, Wellington. The cottage was built in 1868 by William Randell, the great-grandfather of children's author Beverley Randell.[3][4] He and his wife Sarah raised their 10 children at the cottage. After seventy years of the cottage being owned by other families, Beverley and her husband, Hugh Price, bought the cottage in 1994 and restored it to how it had been at the time of William's ownership.[5][6][7][8]
In 2002, on the suggestion of her daughter Susan Price, Beverley Randell decided to gift the cottage to a trust for the purpose of setting up a writers' residency.[6][8][9][10] The plan was partly inspired by an attempt to set up a similar residency in memory of the poet Lauris Edmond, which had been unsuccessful.[7] It was the first dedicated writers' residency in Wellington.[6] In part, the residency reciprocates the Katherine Mansfield Menton Fellowship, which provides a residency based in France for New Zealand writers.[9] The trust is supported by Creative New Zealand, the New Zealand–France Friendship Fund and the Wellington City Council.[8][11] Founding trustees included Fiona Kidman and Vincent O'Sullivan.[12]
Kirsty Gunn, 2009 writer-in-residence, described the cottage:[13]
From the moment I stepped inside the door at Randell Cottage, 14 St Mary St, Wellington, I felt like I was coming home. Everything about the place was familiar — from the New Zealand timber floorboards to the very positioning of the sash windows that looked out to a garden of native trees and hydrangeas. I had spent Wairarapa holidays in cottages like this, with a coal range in the kitchen and a lean-to pantry with a tin roof that gave off to one side. Even the kinds of prints on the wall, the blue-and-white china in the pantry, were familiar.
Caroline Laurent, the 2021 French recipient, was unable to take up the residency during the year due to COVID-19 border restrictions.[1] She eventually was able to{ take up her residency in December 2022.[14]
Randell Cottage | |
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Randell Cottage as viewed from St Mary Street in Thorndon
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General information | |
Type | cottage |
Designated | 14 December 1995 |
Reference no. | 7281 |
Randell Cottage was registered by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust (now Heritage New Zealand) on 14 December 1995. The building has a Category II classification. The registration covers the building and the section it is placed on and the rationale for the listing was the "historical and cultural heritage significance and value".[5] Some of the household items uncovered during the restoration of the cottage are held at Te Papa.[5][15]
The recipients of the residency have been:[16][17]
Year | New Zealand recipient | French recipient |
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2002 | Peter Wells | Nadine Ribault |
2003 | Tim Corballis | Charles Juliet |
2004 | Michael Harlow | Pierre Furlan[18] |
2005 | Renée | Dominique Mainard |
2006 | Beryl Fletcher | Annie Saumont |
2007 | Whiti Hereaka[19] | Nicolas Kurtovitch [fr] |
2008 | Jennifer Compton | Olivier Bleys [fr][20] |
2009 | Kirsty Gunn[21] | Fariba Hachtroudi |
2010 | Pat White[22] | Yann Apperry[23] |
2011 | Peter Walker[24][25] | Florence Cadier [fr] |
2012 | Vivienne Plumb | |
2013 | Denis Welch[26] | Estelle Nollet[27] |
2014 | Tina Makereti[28] | Thanh-Van Tran-Nhut [fr] |
2015 | Witi Ihimaera Owen Marshall[29] |
David Fauquemberg [fr] |
2016 | Stephanie Johnson[30] | Nicolas Fargues |
2017 | Stephen Daisley | Josef Schovanec |
2018 | James Norcliffe | Amélie Lucas-Gary [fr] |
2019 | Paddy Richardson | Karin Serres |
2020 | Michalia Arathimos[31] | Amaury da Cunha |
2021 | Lynn Davidson[32] | Caroline Laurent [fr][1][14] |
2022 | Rose Lu[33] | Caroline Laurent[14] |
2023 | Rachel O’Neill[34] | Sedef Ecer[35] |
2024 | Hinemoana Baker[36] | Julien Blanc-Gras[37] |