Fragments from an Infinite Catalogue
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Fragments from an Infinite Catalogue is a collection of words and images by a scientist and artist who is fascinated by language. John Ta ne Christeller began writing poems to explain and extend the screenprints and woodblocks he was making, and found it a natural form of storytelling, including working directly in te reo. He writes of fable and fabrication, the game of cricket and the pulse of cicadas, the lifespan of geese and the loss of a mother. Here are love songs, memoirs, eulogies and stories, placed alongside prints and drawings that tell the same tales but in a different way. This is work that carefully measures the value of things, including the limits of art and memory, and the vitality of the environment that drew the poet to science.
About the Author
John Ta ne Christeller grew up in Upper Hutt. His mother, Flora, was a pioneer potter and his father, Gerald, sang professionally, but while John made art for pleasure, science became his career. He studied plants and insects at DSIR, and his research interests took him to Japan, the US, UK and France for extended periods. He went on to learn te reo at Te Wa nanga o Aotearoa and Patua Te Taniwha. John lives in Palmerston North with his wife, Donna.