A photograph of workers from Treetech clearing earthquake-damaged trees from Hagley Park.
A photograph of people driving down Glenarm Street, just off Gayhurst Road.
A photograph of a temporary welfare headquarters set up by Civil Defence.
A photograph of tape along the carpet inside the Crowne Plaza Hotel.
A photograph of large cracks in a footpath along the Avon River.
A photograph of a Wellington Emergency Management Office cap.
A photograph taken inside Nga Hau e Wha Marae on Pages Road.
A photograph of cracks in a flower bed in a residential garden in Christchurch.
A photograph of a crack across Gayhurst Road near Glennarm Terrace.
A copy of Empowered Christchurch's second newsletter, published on 22 February 2015.
A photograph of Ngai Hau e Wha Marae on Pages Road.
The New Zealand public contemplate a dead drought stricken landscape. As well as lack of water, there is a lack of moderate pay scales for CEOs, satisfaction with EQC, quality TV, generous insurance companies, brilliant Solid Energy management, the integrity of John Banks (and by implication that of other MPs), quality education ministers, worthwhile overseas trips by the Prime Minister, 'clever' NZ First MPs and a boost for the West Coast among others. Considered from a Canterbury perspective, the drought of early 2013 becomes a symbol for many of the recent political and social ailments afflicting the land. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
Christchurch lawyer Duncan Webb made the shift into politics because of the people left behind after the Christchurch earthquakes. Now he's ahead of National's Nicky Wagner in the latest results.
This thesis is a creative and critical exploration of how transmedia storytelling meshes with political documentary’s nature of representing social realities and goals to educate and promote social change. I explore this notion through Obrero (“worker”), my independently produced transmedia and transjournalistic documentary project that explores the conditions and context of the Filipino rebuild workers who migrated to Christchurch, New Zealand after the earthquake in 2011. While the project should appeal to New Zealanders, it is specifically targeted at an audience from the Philippines. Obrero began as a film festival documentary that co-exists with strategically refashioned Web 2.0 variants, a social network documentary and an interactive documentary (i-doc). Using data derived from the production and circulation of Obrero, I interrogate how the documentary’s variants engage with differing audiences and assess the extent to which this engagement might be effective. This thesis argues that contemporary documentary needs to re-negotiate established film aesthetics and practices to adapt in the current period of shifting technologies and fragmented audiences. Documentary’s migration to new media platforms also creates a demand for filmmakers to work with a transmedia state of mind—that is, the capacity to practise the old canons of documentary making while comfortably adjusting to new media production praxis, ethics, and aesthetics. Then Obrero itself, as the creative component of this thesis, becomes an instance of research through creative practice. It does so in two respects: adding new knowledge about the context, politics, and experiences of the Filipino workers in New Zealand; and offering up a broader model for documentary engagement, which I analyse for its efficacy in the digital age.
New Zealand Defence Force and Police personnel receiving baked goods.
Army trucks on the way to Christchurch.
An article from Army News, March 2011 titled, "Two Minutes in Time".
New Zealand Defence Force and Police personnel receiving baked goods.
A pile of crushed cars near the site of the CTV Building.
The floors of the CTV Building hanging from the elevator shaft.
A digger clearing rubble on the site of the CTV Building.
An article from Navy Today April 2011 titled, "Cordon Patrols in Lyttelton".
An article from Navy Today April 2011 titled, "Earthquake Hits Close to Home".
An article from Navy Today April 2011 titled, "Surveying the Port".
A photograph of volunteers from the Wellington Emergency Management Office in a van.
A photograph of cracks in pavement, with silt from liquefaction visible on the surface.
Object Overview for 'Earthquake Hazard Assessment for Kaikoura District (Yetton & McCahon, 2009)'
Object Overview for 'Selwyn District engineering lifelines project: Earthuake hazard assessment'
A photograph of Truly Scrumptious Ltd on Victoria Street, which has no noticeable earthquake damage.
A photograph of the rubble from the demolished Para Rubber building on Manchester Street.