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…

VA:POETRY: June 19-25, 2011 Furious Flower Poetry Center presents Continuous Fire, A Seminar on the Poetry of Sonia Sanchez

Continuous Fire: A Seminar on the Poetry of Sonia Sanchez
June 19-25, 2011

This week-long seminar for educators will offer an extensive critical view of African American poetry in general and Sonia Sanchez’s work in particular. In workshops and discussions, senior scholars will engage participants in intensive study of Sanchez’s work.

  • Workshop topics include the role of Sanchez’s poetry in imparting social justice, her poetry within the framework of the Black Arts Movement and the mainstream literary cannon, and an exploration into the musicality of her poetry.
  • College teachers will leave ready to contribute to the scholarship on Sanchez and high school teachers will complete a lesson plan.
  • Participants will also benefit from artistic events, an open mic night, networking opportunities, and a generous amount of research time.
  • The week will end with an interview and Q& A with the poet Sonia Sanchez, as well as a reading and book signing.

Spaces are limited, so we encourage you to register early!

To visit Sonia Sanchez’s website, click here.

Registration, Housing and Parking

Transportation and Directions

Contacts

Links

DC:ART: Millennium Arts Salon’s 2011 Event Calendar

Millennium Arts Salon
Dear Fred,
Millennium Arts Salon’s 2010-2011 program season, “Celebrating Artists” began in the fall 2010 with an exhibition and artist salon series, Ten Artists for Ten Years, commemorating Millennium’s tenth anniversary. The season continues with an “artfully designed” program calendar of events in 2011. We look forward to seeing you at an upcoming event and/or exhibition.
cJudy Greenberg Welcomes In Unison Tour
Museum Director Judy Greenberg welcomes In Unison Tour at Kreeger, January 12, 2011

In Unison: 20 Washington, DC Artists

The Kreeger Museum, 2400 Foxhall Road, NW, WashingtonThrough Feb 26. Sponsored by Millennium Arts Salon

An unprecedented monoprint project, inspired by the creative leadership of Sam Gilliam, brings a diverse group of 20 Washington artists together in the print studio of George Mason University to express their individual styles, while observing and sharing with each other.

Visit: www.kreegermuseum.org/programs/exhibitions/asp for more information.

Millennium Arts Salon Diasporan Dialogues

February 5, 2011, Saturday, Tour at The Kreeger Museum. 2:00 – 3:30 PM. Museum admission.
Reservation required.

This tour is open to all with a special outreach to the African Immigrant Community. It includes a docented tour of the “In Unison” Exhibition, as well as the museum’s permanent, contemporary, and African Art Collections. Please join us. To register: info@millenniumartsalon.org,
Subject line: Diasporan Dialogues. Space is limited.

Creative Voices DC
February 7, 2011, Monday, Panel Discussion at The Phillips Collection, 6:00 – 8:30 PM. By donation. Reservation required.
A distinguished panel whose collective experience represents the universe of curators, writers, artists, art historians, collectors and art administrators explore the topic of Washington artists, with a special focus on African American artists and their contributions to the creative milieu of DC.

Moderated by Dr. Richard Long (cultural historian), panelists include Judy Greenberg (director, the Kreeger Museum), Claudia Rousseau (art historian and critic), Adrienne Child (art historian), Lisa Gold (director, Washington Project of the Arts), and Billy Colbert (artist)

This event represents a collaboration between Millennium Arts Salon and The Phillips Collection, and is sponsored by the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities.
To register, visit: www.phillipscollection.org/calendar.

Millennium Arts Salon Series

6:00 – 8:00 PM at Millennium Arts Salon, 1213 Girard Street, NW, Washington. These events are conducted in MAS’ signature “Salon Style.”
FEE events, Open to the Public (free or discounted for Millennium Arts Salon Club Members).

  • March 5: Tuliza Fleming –Ain’t Nothing Like The Real Thing: How the Apollo Theater Shaped American Entertainment. This Salon will include discussion about the exhibition, curated by Dr. Fleming, and book signing.
  • May 7: Dennis Forbes – Krisna Reddy: Master Printmaker, Sculptor, Artist. This continues our Salons with featured author and self-publisher Mr. Forbes who has much to share about modernism. We will explore this and more at this Salon and book signing.
  • June 4: William T. Williams – Among the most significant contemporary modernist painters, Mr. Williams finds direct artistic and philosophical lineage to the Harlem Renaissance. Mr. Williams is acknowleged as a pillar of American Color Field painting, and extols the “syncronicity” and fusion of jazz in his paintings.

Millennium Arts Salon Collector’s Series

New this season! Millennium will sponsor Private Dinners and Tours of the art collections of selected Collectors’ homes. We are grateful to our hosts of this inagural program, which include:

  • May: Lewis Tanner Moore of the Greater Philadelphia Area presented a recent exhibition of his collection at the Woodmere Museum, which displayed amongst the most far-reaching private collections in America.
  • June: Eric Wray of Prince George’s County, MD is a multiple Emmy Award winning television producer and President of the Collectors Club of Washington, DC. His collection of both African American and African art, and music is a standout.
  • September: Phillip Barlow of Washington, DC is foundational in the Washington, DC arts community. His outstanding collection provides a retrospective of contemporary local Washington art history.

The Millennium Arts Salon Collector’s Series are Members Only events.

For information about membership levels and benefits visit:

http://millenniumartssalon.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=12&Itemid=26

Artfully yours,

The Board of Directors, Staff and Volunteers of

Millennium Arts Salon

Billy Colbert
Billy Colbert, Variable Silkscreen, 2009 Millennium -Pyramid Atlantic Print Collaborative
Chris & Anne at 10 4 10 Artist Talk
Chris Malone at Millennium Ten Artists for Ten Years Exhibition Artist Talk
About Us 

Now celebrating over 11 years, Millennium Arts Salon is committed to advancing cultural literacy through its art and cultural programs, which includes salon talks, exhibitions, tours and special events. Based in historic Columbia Heights, DC, its intimate salon talks are held in its beautifully restored 1923 town home. Through its outreach efforts, it also hosts programs in various venues around the city and collaborates with art institutions, including The Phillips Collection, the Library of Congress, The Sumner School, The Kreeger Museum, the David C Driskell Center at the University of Maryland College Park, Pyramid Atlantic, George Mason University Department of Art, and Parish Gallery of Georgetown DC, to name a few.

DC:ART: Latines / Latin hood @ The Consulate of El Salvador February 7-13th

What: Art Show — free event– fundraiser

When: February 7-13th, 2011

Grand Celebration / Reading/ Music: Sat. Feb. 12th from 5-10pm. No RSVP necessary!

Beverage and appetizers Friday 11 & Saturday 12. 


Other hours: Starting Feb. 7th: M-Th 9a-5p, F 9a-10p, Sat 5p-10p, Su 1-4

Where: The Consulate of El Salvador, 2332 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Georgetown, WDC

More info: latinhoodshow, tresraices.com 301-910-8952

Curated by Ronald Chacón

Latines / Latin hood

A collective of 13 DC-based artists share their vision of what it means to live, feel, grow and evolve as latinos … coming into a new reality and a new life, in a place where the language is different, the flavors different and everything takes shape differently. Here and there at once. Your self-identity and present reality in a state of conflict.

Latines/ latinhood: Translate it as a step first and a process that follows, a need to assimilate to speak, to understand in order to explain, to become another while still anchored in your essential self, all part of the process. Thirteen artists, adopted by DC, adapted to DC yet still living in the shadow of Cervantes. First mere steps, then a process, Latines/ latinhood gives testimony to the experience of what they’ve seen, heard, touched, felt – translated and transposed through word, photography, painting, music and installation. Latines, latinidador the certainty that to understand again is to rearrange your world.

Participating, artists include: Elva Lovos, Lázaro Batista, Francisco Rosario, Mauricio López, Ronald Chacón, Iván Mendizábal, Luis Peralta, Wilfredo Valladares, Katya Miranda y Alberto Roblest. Saturday reception poetry readings by Quique Avilés, Sami Miranda & Iván Mendizábal, with music by Pepe González.

The exhibition opens February 7th and runs through February 13th in the General Consultate of El Salvador in Georgetown. Forty percent of sales from the exhibition are directed to the Fondo Solidario para los Salvadoreños en el Exterior, FOSSALEX” or the Solidarity Fund for El Salvadorans Living in the Exterior, a non-profit whose mission is to help families with repatriation or funeral expenses of departed family members passing in the DC Metro area.

Latinhood.pdf

DC:FILM: Charles Burnett’s Killer of Sheep and other shorts 2/13/11 @Nat’l Gallery of Art

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Film Programs, National Gallery of Art, Washington
FEBRUARY 2011
FILM EVENTS
2011_02_01_Film_12.jpgKiller of Sheep
Sunday, February 13 at 2:00 p.m.

Director in person
One of only a few contemporary filmmakers to be honored with a MacArthur Fellowship, the Maya Deren Award of the American Film Institute, and Howard University’s Paul Robeson Award for outstanding achievement, Charles Burnett introduces a program of his work, including early short films and the feature Killer of Sheep. (Charles Burnett, 1977, 81 minutes)


Films are shown in the East Building Auditorium, 4th Street at Constitution Avenue NW. There is no charge for admission but seating is on a first-come, first-seated basis. Doors open approximately 30 minutes before each show time. Programs are subject to change.

For more information call (202) 842-6799, e-mail film-department or visit www.nga.gov/programs/film/

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4th & Constitution Avenue NW
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Hours: Mon-Sat 10am-5pm, Sun 11am-6pm
Admission is always free
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GA:ART: SCAD Museum of Art expansion will provide a permanent home for the Walter O. Evans Center for African American Studies

January 26, 2011
Savannah College of Art and Design

SCAD Museum of Art expansion will provide a permanent home for the Walter O. Evans Center for African American Studies

http://www.scad.edu/museum/

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On Savannah’s Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, the SCAD Museum of Art is creating a home for one of the most significant collections of African American art at any museum in the United States. Savannah native and retired surgeon Dr. Walter O. Evans hopes to foster a greater awareness of and appreciation for the contributions of African Americans to the global art community through his donation to SCAD of major works by some of the greatest African American artists.

The 27 million USD expansion of the SCAD Museum of Art will include the creation of the Walter O. Evans Center for African American Studies, as well as space for all the collections and exhibitions of the museum.

For Dr. Evans, the reasons to establish a permanent home in Savannah for his collection are deeply personal. "My mother still lives here. Savannah is my home. I want children here to learn from my collection, to see themselves represented on gallery walls. I also envisioned my collection living at an institution that would not only respect and appreciate the works, but that would also create meaningful educational components around the works. I’m fortunate that such a place exists in Savannah: SCAD."

When Dr. Evans and his wife, Linda, approached SCAD in 2005 with the idea of donating some of their artistic and cultural treasures to the university, SCAD President Paula Wallace didn’t hesitate. "I immediately said, ‘yes, yes, yes.’ It is not only a tremendous honor that Walter and Linda have entrusted SCAD with their cherished collection, but the opportunities for SCAD students, and students worldwide, to study such important and historical works of African American art are priceless."

Upon the expected fall 2011 completion of the restoration of the 1853 freight depot of the Central of Georgia Railroad, the new SCAD Museum of Art will feature an additional 65,000 square feet of gallery, museum and educational space, including the Evans Center, classrooms and a 250-seat theater.

Currently, all of the historic brick walls are stabilized with steel beams and repointed by masons with historic mortar, concrete has been poured for most of both floors, the ground has been leveled, a metal roof covers the second floor, and work on the tower has begun. "It feels good to watch the progress of the museum expansion," said Dr. Evans, who regularly tours the construction site. "SCAD has a long history of restoring buildings carefully, meticulously, on time and on budget. I’m looking forward to seeing the finished museum."

From the Evans Center and SCAD’s prominent collections to the building’s design itself, the SCAD Museum of Art is poised to become one of the most important artistic and cultural centers in the country.

SCAD: The University for Creative Careers
The Savannah College of Art and Design is a private, nonprofit, accredited institution that offers bachelor’s and master’s degree programs in 43 majors. Visit scad.edu.

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DC:POETRY:Tidal Basin Review Reading and Reception, 2/3/11 – 7:15 p.m.

Tidal Basin Review will host a reading at the Thurgood Marshall Center, 1816 12th Street N.W., Washington, DC 20009. No charge. Donations welcomed. Featuring Reginald Dwayne Betts, Iman Byfield, Ching-In Chen, Michela Costello, DéLana R.A. Dameron, Kyle Dargan, Elizabeth Fogle, Brian Gilmore, and Douglas Kearney. Music by DJ AJ and refreshments to follow.

Reginald Dwayne Betts is a husband and the father of a young son. He is the author of the memoir A Question of Freedom and the poetry collection Shahid Reads His Own Palm.

Iman Byfield is an MFA-Poetry candidate at Chicago State University. She works as an editorial assistant at Third World Press, and is a poetry editor for 95Notes literary magazine. Her work has appeared in the Garland Court Review and Eight Magazine, a student publication.

Ching-In Chen is the author of The Heart’s Traffic (Arktoi Books/Red Hen Press). Daughter of Chinese immigrants, she is a Kundiman, Macondo and Lambda Fellow. A community organizer, she has worked in the Asian American communities of San Francisco, Oakland, and Boston. Ching-In is a member of Save Our Chinatown Committee, which is focused on preserving the historical Riverside Chinatown.

Michela Costello is a poet and teacher in Washington, DC. She is currently an adjunct professor of English and Education. Her writing has been published or is forthcoming in The Glasgow Review, Wanderlust and Poetryfish, among others.

DéLana R.A. Dameron is the author of How God Ends Us selected by Elizabeth Alexander as the 2008 South Carolina Poetry Book Award winner. She currently resides in New York City.

Kyle Dargan is the founder and editor of POST NO ILLS magazine and an assistant professor of literature and creative writing at American University. His most recent collection is Logorrhea Dementia: A Self-Diagnosis (UGA, 2010). His first collection, The Listening, was awarded the 2003 Cave Canem Poetry Prize, and his second, Bouquet of Hungers, won a 2008 Hurston/Wright Legacy Award.

Elizabeth Fogle writes poems very much rooted in place and myth and though she is no longer living in the Carolinas or near the Atlantic, she continues to write about the places and people that haunted her as a child. She currently teaches in the English program at Penn State Erie, the Behrend College and lives in Erie, Pennsylvania.

Brian Gilmore is Poet, public interest lawyer; two books: elvis presley is alive and well and living in harlem, (Third World Press 1993); Jungle Nights and Soda Fountain Rags: Poem for Duke Ellington (Karibu Books 2001), columnist, The Progressive Media Project, contributing writer: Ebony Magazine (online); Individual Artist Award from the Maryland State Arts Council in 2001, 2003; Cave Canem fellow 1997; Pushcart Prize nominee 2007.

Poet/Performer/Librettist Douglas Kearney’s work has been featured in many fine publications and venues in print, in-the-flesh and digital code. His first full-length collection of poems, Fear, Some, was published in 2006 (Red Hen Press). His second manuscript, The Black Automaton, was a National Poetry Series selection (Fence). He lives in the Valley with his family.

Click AWP 2011 Off-site Events for more information.

MD:ART: Resonant Forms – February 11 Opening Reception

PGAAMCC GALLERY 110 LOGO
Resonant Forms

Opening Reception

February 11, 2011 5pm-8pm

Hosted by the Prince George’s County Chapter of The Links, Inc.

RES FORMS ALL INFO
Public Programs:

Saturday, February 12, 2:00pm-4:00pm

Artist Talk with Alonzo Davis, Martha Jackson-Jarvis and

Frank Smith

A rare chance to hear from three esteemed and dynamic artists as they relate and share their unique experiences of their art work.

Saturday, March 19, 2:00pm-4:00pm

Message in the Bottle:

A Discussion with Martha Jackson-Jarvis and A.M. Weaver

A major voice shaping the discourse and dissemination of information on visual artists of color and women artists, artist/curator/writer A. M. Weaver will engage in a discussion with artist Martha Jackson- Jarvis about her work.

Saturday, April 2, 2:00pm-4:00pm

Alonzo Davis & The Bamboo Muse

Join artist Alonzo Davis for a discussion and poetic recitations featuring The Bamboo Muse, a book of Davis’ artwork paired with the poetry and prose of twelve writers inspired by his work.

Resonant Forms is A Collaborative Exhibition in Two Galleries at:

The Gateway Arts Center
3901 Rhode Island Avenue

Brentwood, MD 20722

Prince George’s African American Museum & Cultural Center, Inc.

Gallery 110

301.209-0592, www.pgaamcc.org

Gallery Hours:

10am-6pm Tuesday through Saturday

10am-7pm Thursday

Closed Sunday & Monday

Brentwood Arts Exchange – exchanging ideas through art.

301-277-2863/ tty. 301-446-6802

arts.pgparks.com

Gallery Hours:

10am – 8pm Monday through Friday

10am – 6pm Saturday

Closed Sunday.