Sri Lanka
- Sophie Cunningham (2005)
- Nick Drayson (2004)
- Bronwyn Lea (2003/4)
- Gay Bilson (2003)
- Christopher Kremmer (2000)
Sophie Cunningham (2005), Sri Lanka
Supported by Arts Victoria and the Australia Council.
Nick Drayson (2004), Sri Lanka
Supported by the Australia Council and Arts ACT.
Bronwyn Lea (2003/4), Sri Lanka
At the time of her residency Bronwyn Lea was a doctoral student of writing at the University of Queensland, where she also taught Poetics. Lea is the author of Flight Animals which won the Wesley Michel Wright Prize for Poetry and the FAW Anne Elder Award. During her six week residency, Lea wrote approximately twenty new poems many inspired by Sri Lankan art, literature and sculpture.
Supported by the Australia Council.
Gay Bilson (2003), Sri Lanka
Gay Bilson has been writing about food and reviewing books for many years. During her residency in Sri Lanka Bilson completed the final draft of a book of autobiographical, gastronomical essays for Penguin Books A Pillow Book for the Table. Bilson’s new book, How to Scrape a Coconut, based on her Sri Lankan research, is a personal exploration of culinary and agricultural practices; the education of an Australian cook and writer in the cuisine of a different country.
Supported by the Australia Council and Arts South Australia.
Christopher Kremmer (2000), Sri Lanka
Christopher Kremmer is author of the award-winning Stalking the Elephant Kings: In Search of Laos and The Carpet Wars. A former foreign correspondent for print and television, he has spent over a decade in South Asia and the Middle East. During his residency in Sri Lanka, the Lunugunga Estate hosted Kremmer. There he researched and wrote a large part of a screenplay adaptation of 19th century French playwrite Octave Mirbeau’s The Torture Garden.
Supported by the Australia Council.