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Overview“Naomi Shihab Nye breathes poetry like the rest of us breathe air. When she exhales, the world becomes different. Better.” —The Grand Rapids Press Naomi Shihab Nye’swork provides a spotlight on the everyday and reawakens the beauty in the ordinary. She is the author and/or editor of more than 25 volumes. Her books of poetry include A Maze Me: Poems for Girls; Red Suitcase; Words Under the Words; You & Yours, a best-selling poetry book of 2006; and 19 Varieties of Gazelle: Poems of the Middle East, a finalist for the National Book Award. Other works include seven prize-winning poetry anthologies for young readers, including This Same Sky, The Space Between Our Footsteps: Poems & Paintings from the Middle East, and What Have You Lost? Honeybee, her collection of poems for young adults, won the 2008 Arab American Book Award in the Children’s/Young Adult category. Nye has been a Lannan Fellow, a Guggenheim Fellow, and a Witter Bynner Fellow. In January 2010 she was elected to the Board of Chancellors of the Academy of American Poets. This reading is inspired in part by the Folger’s exhibition Beyond Home Remedy: Women, Medicine, and Science, on view January 21 – May 14, 2011. Conversation moderated by Sarah Browning. Listen to audio of Shihab Nye reading her poem, “Streets.” from…Lunch in Nablus City Park When you lunch in a town From 19 Varieties of Gazelle: Poems of the Middle East by Naomi Shihab Nye © 1994,1995,1998, 2002 by Naomi Shihab Nye, published by Greenwillow Press. Used with permission of the author. |
DC:ART: Around My Way: Opportunities for Artists in Anacostia
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Contact: Briony Evans Hynson, Creative Director
Phone: 202-536-8994
arts@archdc.org
www.honfleurgallery.com
In Historic Anacostia, announcing two opportunities for artists with deadlines fast approaching.
ARCH Residency Program, Summer Session
Deadline: March 1, 2011
Summer applications for the ARCH Artists Residency Program are being accepted now.
The program provides free housing and free workspace!! For more details, please click here or email arts@archdc.org with questions.
The ARCH Development Corporation (ADC) artist residency program is an opportunity for artists to pursue their creative project amid DC’s vibrant and diverse urban environment. . The residencies are approximately 8 weeks each. Each artist will work closely with the creative staff at the Honfleur Gallery and The Gallery at Vivid Solutions to determine the parameters of the residency. Residency will focus primarily on the artists’ project, and also foster connections to the local community, encourage dynamic interactions and engagement, and develop exposure to the resources of the greater DC cultural community. The program will offer free housing and free workspace to participating artists. The residency is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts. Application fee $25.
- Summer DEADLINE March 1st, 2011 – The Summer Residency dates: May 30th –July 22nd 2011. Open to any visual artists.
Call to Artists: 5th Annual East of the River Exhibition
Deadline: March 21, 2011
Honfleur Gallery and The Gallery at Vivid Solutions are pleased to announce the call for submissions for the 5th Annual East of the River Exhibition, highlighting the creative minds of Washington DC’s Wards 7 and 8. Artists living, working or with roots in the communities east of the Anacostia River may submit up to 20 images for review by the panel of esteemed judges:
Stephen Bennett Phillips
Director of the Fine Arts Program at the Federal Reserve Board
Renee Stout
acclaimed Washington, DC based artist
Susana Raab
Photographer, The Smithsonian Anacostia Museum
This year’s exhibition will focus on the presentation of bodies of work from up to six selected artists, to be exhibited at the Honfleur Gallery and The Gallery at Vivid Solutions. Proposals for works in progress will be accepted. A $300 award per artist will be presented to each artist selected for exhibition, and in addition, an individual work selected as Best in Show will be announced during opening night reception. The galleries are offering an optional Portfolio Workshop for interested parties, see the application for details. This exhibition is partially funded by the National Endowment for the Arts and the DC Commission on the Arts & Humanities.
Deadline for Submission: March 21st, 2011
Opening Night: Friday, August 5th 2011
To Apply:
Please submit the following in hard copy- email submissions will not be accepted:
$10 Application fee with check or money order
One Page Art Resume or CV
Artists Statement
Application Page with Image Info
CD with up to 20 jpeg images of work proposed for the exhibition.
Submit to:
Honfleur Gallery
c/o EOR Exhibit 2011
1227 Good Hope Rd. SE
Washington D.C. 20020
Full details are available under the News & Events section at:
DC:POETRY: Poetry Mutual’s February Capitol Hill Reading
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Langstongate…
There are so many threads on Facebook about the recent liberating Busboys and Poet’s (BBP) life-size cutout of an archival photo of Langston from his very early days as a busboy in the segregated Wardman Park Hotel.
Poet/Photographer Thomas Sayers Ellis admitted to taking the cutout as an act of protest..and fully understand and agree with his sentiment for many, many reasons…I have ruminating on how I would respond to all the threads then I figured that was impossible so i would just do here that way I can say what i want how i want and not have to worry about making all the points i want to make in one shot…so without further to do
- No Press is Bad Press: Andy is loving all the press his restaurant is getting right now, as a very shrewd business man who does not pay for marketing this is a prime opportunity to increase his brand and the hype around it..even this post is adding to it. So let’s make sure something forward thinking and constructive comes out of all this and not just more hype for Busboys.
- In response to the pypinnock’s (BBP’s director of Events) comment on the Washington Post Realiable Source column. She said that they “hoped that it (the cutout) was a fun way pay tribute to the restaurant’s namesake on his birthday”. The reality is the image was in bad taste, why not a photo of him at is desk or on the typewriter. The image itself calls to mind the era when Hughes’ only choice at the Wardman Park was to be a busboy. Additionally, in the folklore of BBP the story is often told about how he slipped his poems amongst the papers of Vachel Lindsay, what the BBP folklore leaves out is that the reason he had to slip those poems in his Lindsay’s papers is because the Wardman Park Hotel did not allow African Americans into the hotel’s auditorium where Lindsay was reading took place. So for many us poets of conscience , poets of color, poets of compassion, witness and otherwise seeing a Langston cutout from that era is not fun or a novelty to us, it is an insult. We would rather see him how we would like to see ourselves represented doing the work we love.
- As a former poet-in-residence of the BusBoys and Poets (BBP) in Shirlington, VA, I must say that I agree with many if not all the criticisms posted on Facebook and in the comments of the Post articles. I left my post as poet-in-residence, not because the $150 (= cost of the Langston cutout) per month i was being paid was a pittance (for the amount of work i was being asked to doi), because the fact is it was a pittance and I did not need the money. I ultimately left because it was communicated to me by Andy that it was more important to have a packed house of warm, food and drink buying bodies than to have a smaller group of faithful poetry lovers and poets that would ultimately build a larger poetry following because of the quality poetry and demographic differences of the Shirlington location. Quite honestly, i understand Andy’s rationale as a business decision, but as an artist i was no longer able to commit myself to an arrangement that sacrificed a high quality art and a committed audience for a simple packed house. Some artist are OK with that, I am not. I understand that may be seen as privileged position but i am at peace with that too. i also want to note here that even though Derrick Weston Brown and Holly Bass got paid more than I did as Poet-in-Residence, what they are paid is still a pittance with respect to the effort,time, their education, credentials, publications and local, national and international acclaim. I understand that the profit margins can be narrow in the restaurant business, but i also know that well proven tenants like BBP get preferred lease arrangements with developers such as PN Hoffman, Lowe, Bundy, CIM , EYA (which is not an issue at 14th and V, because Andy owns the space) that greatly reduce the financial risk of this operation. BBP’s benefits from the gentrification that is occurring around the DMV area and will benefit from the same in Harlem, Seattle, Boulder and other areas that are in the pipeline.
- As the curator of the American Poetry Museum, an organization that operates on a budget probably less than BBP’s annual electric bill , we have managed to pay poets many $100 (and in some cases travel reimbursement) for featured reading in the series, it has not always been easy in fact i have almost gotten put on front street on a poet’s blog for late payment. Despite all of that we press on. If an organization like the American Poetry Museum can do it with our paltry budget surely a behemoth like Busboys could do the same. Anyway, I say all of that to say is that BBP is not the only place to hear great poetry in the DMV, nor is it the best (whatever that means). We have to challenge ourselves to hold and support readings in other spaces and venues so that one venue does not feel a sense of entitlement and ownership over the poets or the poetry….truth be told the poets don’t even own poetry, we are just blessed to be stewards of it for a while until poetry decides to dispose of us.
- My issues with BBP are many, but the core of my issue with BBP really centers around BBP’s relationship to the poets with regard to the credibility we have given it and how that does not translate into a respectable compensation structure. I don’t think it is too much to ask that a business’s rhetoric match its reality, especially because the business says that it does so. If poetry is the centerpiece of what you do as a business, why is it not reflected in the way you compensate your Poets-in-Residence and the featured poets particularly at 9 on the Ninth and Sunday Kind of Love, where world class poets are being brought in that add credibility to the establishment as the premiere place to hear poetry in DC, simply providing space, quite honestly is not enough.Without Langston’s narrative as a namesake…without the poets (the bookstore and the ideas represented therein) BBP would not be much more than just a restaurant in a great location with a performance space. Space is the place, but Space is not enough…
At the end of the day what I (as well as a few other poets) would like to see ss a meaningful conversation between Andy, the poets who are defending his actions and those of us poets with side with the liberated Langston. The Poetry Council that was established and may now be defunct was a great idea, but never really gathered any serious momentum, that needs to be reinvigorated or reinvented to include poets that are out in the community and that are not beholden to Busboys, this hopefully with ensure honest critique rather than capitulation.
I have many other thoughts on this but that’s all for now..i gotta go write some poems…
DC:POETRY: Reminder: HOME featuring Khadijah “Moon” Ali-Coleman, December 17th, 2010
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DC:MUSIC:JAZZ: THINKING ABOUT JAZZ – Duke Ellington – December 11th, 1pm
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Southwest Renaissance Development Corporation | 400 I Street, SW | Washington | DC | 20024 |
DC:ART:FOCUS GROUP: Four Walls, Five Women Opening Reception Nov. 19
DC:ART: Around My Way: Fotoweek Anacostia – starts this Saturday! Receptions 11/10 and 11/11!
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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.
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