DC:POETRY:Project 60: E. Ethelbert Miller, the Making of an African American Writer

Project 60: E. Ethelbert Miller, the Making of an African American Writer

Please join the Special Collections Research Center at the Gelman Library of The George Washington University on November 19, 2010 for a celebration honoring D.C. poet E. Ethelbert Miller. The celebration, which coincides with Miller’s 60th birthday, will include discussion and comments by Ethelbert and his family and friends about his journey as a writer, as well as an examination and assessment of his work and a poetry reading with Sandra Beasley, Naomi Ayala, Ken Carroll, and Brian Gilmore. Accompanying the event is the exhibit “Call and Response,” which explores Miller’s life, major works, and their impact on those around him, both inside and outside the writing community.

Project 60: E. Ethelbert Miller, the Making of an African American Writer

E. Ethelbert Miller. Photo by Julia Jones.

The Project 60 event is a joint program of the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities and the Special Collections Research Center. The program begins at 1:30 PM in room 207 in Gelman Library and continues through the evening. For a complete schedule of the day’s activities, visit: http://www.gwu.edu/gelman/spec/EEM_PROGRAM.pdf

Since 1974, Ethelbert Miller has served as the Director of the African American Resource Center at Howard University. This position and his numerous literary and political activities in the Washington writing community have afforded him the opportunity to develop his own talent and to influence and nurture emerging African American artists. Ethelbert is an accomplished author, teacher, editor, and mentor. His poetry publications include among others How We Sleep On the Nights We Don’t Make Love; Whispers, Secrets, and Promises; First Light: New and Selected Poems; Where Are the Love Poems for Dictators?; Season of Hunger/Cry of Rain: Poems 1975-1980; and The Migrant Worker. Ethelbert is also an accomplished editor. His editorial work has included many anthologies, including In Search of Color Everywhere: a Collection of African American Poetry; Women surviving massacres and men: nine women poets: an anthology; and with Ahmos Zu-Bolton II, Synergy D.C. anthology. He has penned two memoirs, Fathering Words: the Making of an African American Writer and The 5th Inning. Ethelbert is the founder and Director of the Ascension Poetry Reading Series, one of the oldest literary series in the Washington area.

Ethelbert Miller’s connections to the Special Collections Research Center (SCRC) are significant and far-reaching. In 1984, Miller and performance artist Chasen Gaver promoted the idea of a Washington Writers’ Archive with a goal to collect the literary papers of the writing community in D.C., especially those of artists who focused their work on the issues of concern to residents of Washington. Since then, subsequent partnerships between local poets and SCRC archivists have resulted in the beginnings of a comprehensive community history, including the papers of Miller himself, that will capture the intersections between members of a community of artists who interact both personally and artistically.

Source:http://www.gelman.gwu.edu/collections/SCRC/current-events/project-60-e.-ethelbert-miller-the-making-of-an-african-american-writer

DC:ART:Around My Way: Organica @ BlankSpace SE

ORGANICA : PHOTOGRAPHIC SERIES

by Melani N. Douglass & Rachel Eliza Griffiths

Gallery Hours: Monday – Saturday 10am -6pm

Opening Reception: November 6, 2010 at 7pm

@ Blank Space SE : 1922 MLK Jr Ave SE Washington DC 20020

The American Poetry Museum is pleased to announce the opening of ORGANICA: Photographic Series by Melani N. Douglas and Rachel Eliza Griffiths. The works to be displayed will allow its audience to appreciate the beauty in the simplistic nature of everyday life. The exhibit will feature the works of poet and photographer Rachel Eliza Griffiths, and photographer Melani N. Douglass. It will also introduce the works of student photographer James Holiday.

Rachel Eliza Griffith’s literary and visual work has been widely published in journals, magazines, anthologies, and periodicals including Callaloo, The New York Times, Crab Orchard Review, Mosaic, RATTLE, Puerto Del Sol, Brilliant Corners, Indiana Review, Lumina, Ecotone, The Acentos Review, PMS: poem memoir story, Saranac Review, Torch, The Drunken Boat, Black Nature: Four Centuries of African American Nature Poetry, Inkwell, Black Arts Quarterly, African American Review, Comstock Review, Hambone, and many others.

Melani N. Douglass has been a committed leader in urban education for over 10 years. After realizing the success that students achieve through arts integrated learning environments, Ms. Douglass began a dual career as a visual artist and an educator. As an artist and educator, Ms. Douglass has conducted student workshops, teacher trainings and lectures for the Dallas Museum of Art, Milwaukee Public Charter Schools, DC Public Schools, The Reginald F. Lewis Museum, The Maryland Historical Society, the Brooklyn Friends School in New York, and the Smithsonian Institution. She has been honored by the Artist and Elaine Thornton Foundation and David Parks, son of Gordon Parks, honored Ms. Douglass as the guest Lecturer for the R. C. Hickman Young Photographers Workshop and the Gordon Parks Young Photographers Competition.

 

AMERICAN POETRY MUSEUM

“The American Poetry Museum is dedicated to celebrating poetry, promoting literacy, fostering meaningful dialogue, encouraging an appreciation for the diversity of the American experience, and educating local, national, and international audiences through the presentation, preservation and interpretation of American poetry.”

For additional information, Contact:
La’Tasha Banks, Program Coordinator
The American Poetry Museum
202.494.4093
lbanks@americanpoetrymuseum.org
www.americanpoetrymuseum.org

MD:POETRY:Tracie Morris in November @Joe’s Movement Emporium

TRANSPARENT PRODUCTIONS

Sunday, November 14th8:00PM @ $15

@Joe’s Movement Emporium

THE TRACIE MORRIS BAND

“The text is the body; the body tests text”

Tracie Morris (poetry)

Marvin Sewell (guitar)

Val Jeanty (electronics)

Few poets explore sound and words as creatively and within music as TRACIE MORRIS, a multi-disciplined poet, performance artist, and founding member of the renowned Nuyorican Poets and the Black Rock Coalition.

MARVIN SEWELL most recently served as vocalist Cassandra Wilson’s guitarist and music director.

Percussionist and turntabalist VAL JEANTY defines her musical approach as “Afro Electronica”, in which she uses technology to transport listeners into dreamlike expressions of Afro, Creole and electronics.

@Joe’s Movement Emporium

(Diagonal to GLUT Natural Food Store)

3309 Bunker Hill Rd

Mt. Rainier MD 20712

301-699-1819/www.joesmovement.org (to buy tickets on-line)

“Music paints pictures that only the minds eye can see.” (Sun Ra)

www.transparentproductionsdc.org

“To long conversations about the philosophical ramifications of a beautiful day”

– sekou sundiata