Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Liz Laribee to feature at Poetry Thursdays October 24




Liz Laribee, featured performer,
October 24: Poetry Thursdays,
Midtown Scholar Bookstore, 1302 North Third Street,
Harrisburg, PA 17102. (717)236-1680.


Liz Laribee-- zowie! Artist & writer & founder of The MakeSpace: an art collective in Harrisburg. Her projects, solo and collaborative, are largely influenced by and dedicated to community. As Director of the MakeSpace, she spends most of her time spackling walls, providing consultations to community members interested in launching projects, and writing grants.

Her work with The MakeSpace has been highlighted in The Burg, Central Voice, Harrisburg Magazine, The Patriot News, ABC27, Keystone Edge, and Fresh Photography's blog. As an artist, Laribee established the Recovering/Uncovering Art Co.

An interest in using the whole buffalo has shaped her creative process, and she works almost exclusively with salvaged materials with focuses mainly on cardboard portraiture, repurposed handcrafts, photography, and found poetry.

Her artwork has been shown widely in the Keystone State, including an exhibit at the Philadelphia Mausoleum of Contemporary Art. She also teaches workshops and classes on recycled art, creative writing, and poetry to students of all ages.

Though Laribee’s traveled to many a foreign clime, she takes great pleasure in her current geographic tenure smack in the heart of the Capital City of the great state of Pennsylvania.




 

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Poet, Pop Culture Expert Shares Crucial Writing Concepts


Wednesday, September 11, 2013

La-La & Lu-Lu-- comix for the ages!

BOING! Let's talk classic
La-La & Lu-Lu:
check it out right here:
http://www.braintumorcomix.com/2013/09/la-la-lu-lu-19.html




That wacky La-La & Lu-Lu comic strip, judged by serious pontificators to be
more than 5X better than TUNA-Vision and/or wild 'gators.

"Brain Tumor Comix-- breaking ever new ground
in fresh & tasty black & white!" --Jorma Eppu

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Iris G Poets Romp at Red Rose Commons



Poets of Iris G. Press perform in Lancaster Feb 27
Barnes & Noble, Red Rose Commons
 

Lancaster Poetry Exchange
Presents Poets of Iris G. Press

Lancaster Poetry Exchange is presenting a special reading
by select Poets of Iris G. Press, February 27, 2013, 7:30 pm
at Barnes & Noble, Red Rose Commons, 1700 Fruitville Pike,
Lancaster, PA 17601, (717) 290-8171.
Performers include Marty Esworthy, Rebecca Gonzalez and Jeff Rath.


Marty Esworthy, a Megaera award-winning poet, editor emeritus of Steel Point Quarterly, is founder of the Almost Uptown Poetry Cartel.
He’s been published in Haggard & Halloo, text_TOWER, Literary Chaos, Fledgling Rag, The Fox Chase Review. Recent Esworthy collections include hard reality, Pacobooks, 2004, 26 Javanese Proverbs, Iris G. Press, 2006 and The Object Stares Back, Uh-Oh!, T&T Press, 2009.



Rebecca Gonzalez is a Pushcart nominee and the 2008 R.E. Foundation Award winner for Outstanding Poetry. Some of her poems will be appearing in the upcoming CD anthology, Live at the Corner of Poetry and Main: Celebrating Five Years of Annapolis Poetry. She is the author of, Sonata for Rain, published by Iris G. Press. Her second and upcoming book is titled, Aerial Descending.



Jeff Rath is the author of three collections of poetry. Rath won the 2007 R.E. Foundation Award for Outstanding Poetry, and is a Pushcart Prize nominee. His new book is Film Noir, published in 2011 by Iris G. Press. Rath has published two other books: The Waiting Room at the End of the World, in 2007, and In the Shooting Gallery of the Heart, 2009, both published by Iris G Press.

-----------------------------------------------------

Coming up at Midtown Scholar Poetry Thursdays

Open mics and featured performers: at the Midtown Scholar Bookstore,
1302 North Third Street, Harrisburg, PA 17102, (717) 236.1680.


February 21 — Open poetry Reading

February 28 --Le Hinton and MaDonna Awotwi

March 7-- Open mic

March 14 — Feature, Carla Christopher

March 21 — Feature, Richard James

March 28 — Feature, Barbara DeCesare

April 4 — Open mic

April 11 — Feature, Michael Hoover

April 18 -- TBA

April 25 -- Open mic

May 2 -- Feature, Kerry Shawn Keys

 

—————————————–
Also… word has it that, after a winter of some trials and tribulation, renowned cartel member, Maria James-Thiaw is getting a manuscript together. A new collection to be published later this Spring by PostDada Press.
.

Monday, January 2, 2012

Solidarity with the indigenous world: Surrealism in 2012!


Surrealism in 2012: Toward the World of the Fifth Sun
January 6-February 19, 2012, GoggleWorks Center for the Arts, Reading, Pa
Opening Reception: First Friday January 6, 2012 5:30-7:30pm

Happy new year! As we roar into the Winter Solstice of Year 2012, beginning
of the 14th baktun (cycle) in the Maya long count calendar, and the fifth
rebirth of our Sun, scores of surrealist artists and writers from around the
globe have sent their works for a long-awaited exhibition honoring this theme,
in keeping with that movement´s principle of “poetry made by all” and solidarity
with the indigenous world. Yowsa!

There is no doubting the astronomical and mythopoetic
genius of the people who created this spectacular and historic marker.
http://www.goggleworks.org/Exhibitions/

This gathering of creative forces in Eastern Pennsylvania represents the
first collective manifestation of the ongoing surrealist movement in that part
of the United States. It is a rare opportunity to experience the stimulating
atmosphere of authentic surreality apart from the academicism or media
distortion so often identified with that word. It is also a good setting, right
at the beginning of the storied year, smack in the middle of the Eastern
seaboard, to stir one's ideas re the meaning of a world bound for
important, mayhaps, startling, changes in the “World of the Fifth Sun!”

This remarkable show, curated by the legendary Joe Jablonski, features over
40 (count 'em!) Surrealist artists from far and wide. Surrealism in 2012 is a
stunning exhibition of the international surrealist movement from the 1960s
through today. It'll take your breath away!

For more information: Ring up 610-374-4600
http://www.surrealismin2012.org/

Monday, October 10, 2011

Don't pig out on these balto riffs!

balto riffs, misc

when i first moved to westminster MD I was loathe to drive into balt cos i had gotten lost there a coupla times driving from petersburg VA (Fort Lee) to Harrisburg on holidays & stuff.
But when i heard john Ciardi was speaking (not reading) at peabody, i took a chance.
I bravely drove down rt 83, luckily got off at the right exit [oddly, but for real, sartre loved him], & bam! I'm at mt Vernon place. It was so cool, giant obelisk, little bronze statues, & ciardi was fun. & i no longer feared the streets of baltimore.
holy scarlotti, it changed my life.

---------------------
CODA
Later subbing in Metuchen NJ I had some of his nieces & nephews in my classes & didn't embarass myself cos i knew how to say his name.
Ciardi (CHAR-DEE) was pretty famous in lit circles (Little did i know that my sicilian roots also gave me a subliminal advantage [YOU ARE HUNGRY FOR POPCORN]).
hw was lit/poetry editor , saturday review.
and that's the way you spell winsocki!
-----------------
BUCKLE DOWN, WINSOCKI From the Broadway Show "Best Foot Forward" (1941)
-0---------------------ooo----------------------------o--
DOS PASSOS. "More than 60 feet above his head, the brilliant skylights of Baltimore's George Peabody Library provided light for John Dos Passos."
http://baltimoreauthors.ubalt.edu/writers/johndospassos.htm





JOHN CIARDI. poetry editor of the magazine Saturday Review from 1956 to 1972. An outspoken poet and critic known for his sharp and witty images, Mr. Ciardi won praise for his verses, which spoke honestly to children, and for the 1959 poetry textbook ''How Does a Poem Mean?'' He was outspokenly critical of traditional poetry aimed at youngsters, which struck him as ''written by a sponge dipped in warm milk and sprinkled with sugar.''
His many collections of poems for adults, which ranged from war verses to love lyrics and occasional flights of fancy, also met with favorable reactions from critics, who praised him for his honesty.
''He is singularly unlike most American poets with their narrow lives and feuds,'' wrote the critic and poet Kenneth Rexroth. ''He is more like a very literate, gently appetitive, Italo-American airplane pilot, fond of deep simple things like his wife and kids, his friends and students, Dante's verse and good food and wine.'' --http://www.nytimes.com/1986/04/02/obituaries/john-ciardi-poet-essayist-and-translator-69.html

Monday, August 22, 2011

Mostly Me & Zuky in Vorobievi Gori,

looking for images.





Yeah,
lookin'
for images.
...
I mean
the tango
was replaced
by formal
waltz and the Aztec altar
by Christian detachment.
...So, like the film-maker
Andrei Tarkovsky, I always
carry a Polaroid camera with me.
Zuky, he prefers an Olympus FE-230.
We look and learn. (We think.)