PAULA GREEN lives in West Auckland with artist, Michael Hight, and
their two daughters. She is currently completing a doctoral thesis
in the Italian Department at the University of Auckland. Her thesis,
that considers the process of writing in the novels of two contemporary
Italian women, takes both a poetic and an academic form. Her work
has appeared in a range of New Zealand and overseas literary journals
including Landfall, Trout, JAAM, Poetry
NZ, and Poetry International. Auckland University Press
has published two volumes of her poetry, the more recent of which
is Chrome (2000). She founded a series of poetry events in
Auckland in the nineties known as ‘The Alba Readings.’
In 2002 she gave a poetry workshop for the Auckland Writers &
Readers Festival ‘Winter Writing Workshops.’
Green comments: ‘I love writing poems that can exist alone
but are part of larger works with specific themes and rules. “Intersection”
is from an ongoing sequence that I am working on entitled “Lounge
Suite.” The rule is that I use an artwork, one that I have just
seen or one that I recall, as a starting point. I find the moment
in front of a painting compelling but I also like to savour, and in
fact, prolong the emotional, physical and intellectual reactions that
I take away with me. Writing a poem can do this. In part I am translating
a visual image into words, in part I am paying homage to someone else’s
work. I am using the artworks to keep a diary, but I am also heading
off in whatever direction my fancy takes me.
Elizabeth Rees’s painting “Intersection” (Milford
Galleries, Auckland, April-May 2002) haunted me. I was hooked by the
resonation between light and shadow, country and city, belonging and
not belonging, here and not there. Perhaps because I am pulled between
the Waitakere Ranges and the West Coast beaches and Auckland City,
between academic writing and writing poetry, between writing a novel
and writing an essay. I waver between belonging to a poetry community
and not belonging. Whatever crossroads and intersections I encounter
in my life, poetry helps me get my bearings.’