(L to R) Professor Chris Wallace-Crabbe AM with winners Geoff Page, Lesley Lebkowicz and Judy Keighran at the 2017 ACU Poetry Prize. Photo: Supplied.
Australian Catholic University’s (ACU) Melbourne Campus announced Canberra-based poet Geoff Page as the winner of the 2017 ACU Poetry Prize for his piece Charles S Ryan to Alice E Sumner.
Page’s poem was selected ahead of Lichen: 13 points by fellow Canberran Lesley Lebkowicz ($5,000 second prize) and On Botox, bibles and baguettes by Melbourne’s Judy Keighran ($3,000 third prize).
The winner of the $10,000 first prize, Geoff Page is a celebrated poet and author and has published 21 collections of poetry and five verse novels. His abiding themes have been The First World War, Aboriginal dispossession on the Australian frontier, and farming and country-town life in the region where he grew up along the Clarence River near Grafton in Northern New South Wales.
Professor Chris Wallace-Crabbe AM, competition judge, distinguished poet and academic, singled out Page’s winning poem, which recreates a marriage proposal between two historical Australian families, for its gravitas and historical sensibility.
“This is artistic tact and intimations at a very fine level,” he said.
“The poems submitted for the ACU Prize this year remind us just how alive this art is in Australia at present and remains highly important.”
The quality of entries was so high that a special $500 highly-commended prize was awarded to Alastair Spate and Jenny Pollak from Sydney, and Susan Fealy of Melbourne.
ACU’s annual Prize for Poetry is sponsored by the Office of the Vice-President led by Fr Anthony Casamento csma, and continues the tradition of the Catholic Church as a key patron of the arts.
“The Arts are integral to expression. Early Christians, in particular, used symbols, iconography, music and creative language as a way of understanding and identifying their faith.
“The process of artistic creation points to the transformative life that offers joy and hope. In the annual ACU Prize for Poetry, we also enjoy and appreciate the God-given talent of others.” said Fr Casamento.
More than 330 poems were entered addressing this year’s theme of Joy and the winner was chosen from a shortlist of 33. These works will be published in the 2017 ACU Prize for Poetry chapbook which is available for purchase by emailing aculiteratureprize@acu.edu.au