readings + 7.2.08 INTERSECTIONS @ Anacostia Community Museum w/Miriam Kotzin

I went to a really great reading yesterday, one of my favorite people, did an awesome reading with John O’ Dell in Rock Creek Park at the Miller Cabin Series. This series happens every Tuesday at 7:30pm

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*Please take note this event will take place at the Smithsonian’s Anacostia Museum, which is located at:

1901 Fort Place, SE,
Washington, D.C. 20020
For more information call either
202-889-5000 x 141
or 202-633-4820

INTERSECTIONS presents

Miriam Kotzin
Dr. Miriam Kotzin teachs literature and creative writing at Drexel University in Philadelphia, where she is the Director of the Certificate Program in Writing and Publishing. She also serves as advisor to Maya, the student literary magazine.

Dr. Kotzin’s poetry has been published in a number of print magazines, among them: The Iron Horse Literary Review, The Painted Bride Quarterly, Boulevard (where she is a contributing editor), The Mid-American Review, The Southern Humanities Review, Pulpsmith, and Confrontation.

Online her poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in the Small Spiral Notebook, Drexel Online Journal, the Vocabula Review, Three Candles, the Poetry Super Highway, For Poetry.com., Word Riot, The Front Street Review, Open Wide, Segue, edificeWRECKED!, Shampoo, Eclectica, FRiGG, Flashquake, Circle Magazine, Branches, Plum Ruby Review, Gator Springs Gazette, Blaze, The Green Tricycle, Riverbabble, MAG: Muse Apprentice Guild, Mini Mag,
Snow Monkey, Maverick Magazine, Poetry Niederngasse, Carnelian and Valparaiso Poetry Review.

*Please take note this event will take place at the Smithsonian’s Anacostia Museum, which is located at:

1901 Fort Place, SE,
Washington, D.C. 20020
For more information call either
202-889-5000 x 141
or 202-633-4820

Why: Artwork, poetry, community, refreshments, and live music by the Rados!

When: Doors open at 7:30 pm. Reading begins at 8:00 pm.

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Late Pass….

I don’t know how I missed this…but maybe I should take more late night walks down by the monuments and galleries…

The National Gallery of Art is showing Martin Puryear from June 22–September 28, 2008Ladder for Booker T Washington - Martin Puryear

Although I am ashamed to admit it I was not familiar with his work until seeing it on the latest issue of Callaloo…so i guess i get a double late pass.

It is exciting to see as you look around the city and see African American artists at some of the major venues here in DC: Jacob Lawrence at the Phillips Collection, Aaron Douglass at The Smithsonian American Art Museum and Martin Puryear and The National Gallery of Art. However, a little gender balance would be nice, i think Henry Thaggert’s she’s so articulate is an awesome start, but it would be nice to see alarge show of say ….Elizabeth Catlett. Who else is missing?

the twisting

So i missed a day, yesterday …..trying to write a poem a day is not easy, especially for someone like me whose proces relies so heavily on procrastination… WordPress doesn’t help because you can actually post date your entries, which i was so tempted to do  to make it appear that i had indeed written a poem yesterday…

NKYINKYIM

loving
you is the twisting,
the torment of hope.

the music of the heart,
slowed to a dirge,
with no promise
of a second line
in sight, a soaked
handkerchief
with no more room
for tears.

from Kwame Dawes

 Dear Friends,
This project, presented here in this interactive website, is what I have been doing for the past six months and what I expect to continue to do for the next little while. The performance of these poems and the music composed by Kevin Simmonds, will be on tour in the fall. The crew for this piece is the same that had such success with Wisteria. A long essay with stunning photographs appears in this month’s issue of The Virginia Quarterly Review and two short documentaries are appearing around the country on the program Foreign Exchange. I trust that you will be moved by this work. The url is: http://www.livehopelove.com/

Hope: The Performance

 Background:
In late 2007, Ghanaian-Jamaican writer Kwame Dawes embarked on a research trip to Jamaica to explore the experience of people living with HIV/AIDS and to examine the ways in which the disease was shaping their lives.

The journey brought him in touch with a range of people who told their stories, shared their lives and taught him a great deal about resilience, hope and possibility in the face of despair.  There were those who were living with the disease, those who had committed their lives to caring for those living with the disease; there were the angry and resentful, the fearful and uncertain, the resigned and hopeless, and the resourceful and hopeful. 

Dawes, an award-winning poet, began to respond to this experience through a series of poems that capture the rich humanity of those he met and the complex emotions that come from contending so intimately with issues of mortality, stigma and grace. Dawes then shared these poems with long-time collaborator, composer and poet Kevin Simmonds who set the poems to music, showcasing the spirit of Dawes’ work.

The Performance:
“Hope” has now been shaped into an hour-long performance performed by an ensemble of thirteen musicians including singers, string ensemble, flute, and percussion.  The work reflects Kevin Simmonds’ eclectic musical tastes that are grounded by a deep soulfulness and a tender economy of modes that shift effortlessly between the classics, Caribbean inflected melodies, and the sublime possibilities of spirituals. The work is performed against the backdrop of stunning photographs of Jamaica and many of the people whose lives have helped to inspire this work. 

Kwame Dawes’ resonant readings of his work represent some of the most exciting poetry performances of today. In “Hope” we are never consumed by pity or unmitigated lament, but we are asked to be engaged by a stark truth-telling tempered by the alchemy that poetry can bring to difficult experience – turning the ordinary into the sublime, into art.  Somehow, this work manages to channel the voices of people in ways that allow us to traverse oceans, borders and the limits of language to find shared truth and meaning. 

The Company: Kwame Dawes, poet; Kevin Simmonds, piano; Valetta Brinson, soprano; Alvoy Bryant, violin; Billy Coakley, tenor; Valerie Johnson, soprano; James Miller, flute; Christopher Neely, viola; Nicole Neely, viola; Cora Phillips, cello; Celia Teasdel, mezzo soprano; Guitarist; Percussionist

 

The Project:
“Hope: The Performance” stems from research done for The Jamaica Project, the second of two Caribbean reporting initiatives undertaken by the Pulitzer Center with support from the MAC AIDS Fund. The first, Heroes of HIV: HIV in the Caribbean, focused on Haiti and the Dominican Republic. Articles in The Palm Beach Post and three video documentaries broadcast on Foreign Exchange are available via an interactive web presentation designed by bluecadet.

 The Jamaica Project involves an extended essay on Jamaica HIV/AIDS issues by Kwame Dawes, scheduled for publication in the spring 2008 issue of The Virginia Quarterly Review, as well as another interactive web presentation, created by photographer Josh Cogan (www.joshuacogan.com) and bluecadet (www.bluecadet.com/portfolio/index.html). 

For more information on Kwame Dawes’s writing, visit www.kwamedawes.com.  For a taste of his work as a poet and performer, see http://video.aol.com/video-search/query/kwame%20dawes. The clips shown therein are from the critically-acclaimed piece “Wisteria: Twilight Songs from the Swamp Country,” a musical and poetry collaboration by Dawes and Simmonds that is the model for “Hope: The Performance” (www.wisteriaperformance.com).

NaPoMo or NaPoWriMo? (and a poem)

So this is NaPoMo or is it NaPoWriMo (or is it both)? and the challenge is to write a poem a day…

Oh boy…

here goes nothing..or everything

Fooled
for the woman I asked to share some sun with me

On this day the sun
puckered her tricky lips. she makes
an invitation for us
to warm our platonic skin
in her simple language

Convinced, I raise my gullible lips
to taste-
her lips change to a smile
as she turns her cheek,
beds down,
sliding under the sheet
of the horizon for the night

Poetry in the Schools fundraiser with Quincy Troupe & Tyehimba Jess

Folger Poetry presents

Under a Spell: Jazz and Blues in Poetry

Quincy Troupe & Tyehimba Jess

quincy troupe 4C080.JPGJessHighRes.JPG

for Folger Shakespeare Library’s

Poetry in the Schools program

Sunday, April 6 • 7-9pm
The Langston Room
Busboys and Poets
14th and V street NW
Washington DC 20009

$40 (1/2 of which is tax deductible) for poetry, music, wine, and heavy hors d’oeuvres

With an open mic- come share your favorite poems about music!
Musical accompaniment provided by bassist Herman Burney and others

Quincy Troupe’s poetry steps to the tempo of be-bop and jazz with electrifying images and variegated references. His work includes The Architecture of Language and a memoir, Miles and Me: A Memoir of Miles Davis.

Tyehimba Jess’ first book of poetry, leadbelly, steeps itself in the blues and broken-down dust of legendary blues musician Huddie “Leadbelly” Ledbetter’s South.

About Folger Poetry in the Schools:

Folger Poetry in the Schools is a way for Folger Poetry to share the excitement of reading, writing, and listening to poetry with Washington, DC Public High School students. Folger Poetry Educators conduct four to six workshops in reading, writing, and listening to poetry in DCPS classrooms. Students receive a book and a visit by one of the acclaimed poets reading in the Folger Poetry series. At the end of the five weeks, students produce and publish an anthology of their own poetry.

“The poetry project of the Folger has provided an enrichment that no teacher acting alone could ever provide. It is my hope that we can continue this program in years to come as its benefits to secondary students is tremendous.”

—Leo Bowman, Teacher, Banneker High School

To RSVP/purchase tickets to the event email Teri Cross Davis at tdavis@folger.edu or call at (202) 675-0374.