Tuesday, April 10, 2007

April 12, 2007 E-Fishwrapper, Bart Baxter

For Immediate Release
Contact: Paul E. Nelson
Global Voices Radio/SPLAB!
908 I St. N.E. #4
Slaughter, WA 98002 253.735.6328

Global Voices Radio / SPLAB! E-Fishwrapper

In this E-Fishwrapper, Bart Baxter Finals tonight, Organic Poetry, Frida Kahlo in Tacoma, Alexandra Oliver, Nico Vassilakis, Bill Ransom & African-American Film Festival.
1) Bart Baxter is alive and Hosting the Bart Baxter Performance Poetry Competition Finals tonight at Baxter Hall at 7 p.m.
The Washington Poets Association invites you to attend the Bart Baxter performance poetry competition tonight, Tuesday, April 10, at 7 pm in the Hugo House Cabaret, not Baxter Hall as previously suggested. We apologize for this error. Eight finalists will compete in head-to-head Taos-style poetry bouts with the overall champ getting $300. Finalists scheduled to perform are: Miryam Gordon, Jared Leising, Jack McCarthy, Rebecca Meredith, Jeremy Richards, Roy Seitz, M. Anne Sweet and D.D. Wigley
Admission is FREE, although donations will be accepted to help the WPA continue its programming and to keep the Board of Directors supplied with gin, beef jerky and mescaline.
Tuesday, April 10, at 7 pm, Richard Hugo House, 1634 11th Avenue, Seattle, WA
2) Organic Poetry, Organismic Cosmology
Organic Poetry Workshop Series with Paul Nelson
Is the universe a machine with a dominant ethos of competition, or an organism based on interdependence, process and relationship? A stance-toward-poem-making based on the latter, Organic Poetry, allows the moment of composition to be an occasion of experience, or an experiment in consciousness. Workshops starts Thursday at 10A and you can still sign up.

This workshop for serious people of all levels of writing experience includes discussion of poets Charles Olson, Robert Duncan, Anne Waldman, Joanne Kyger, Gary Snyder and Michael McClure, sound from these poets discussing poetics and reading their poems, and writing exercises designed to help you allow the act of writing to be an exhilarating revelation of content.

Hugo House, 1634 11th, Seattle. Thursdays, April 12-May 17, 10 a.m.-12 p.m. $195 ($180 members) Some scholarships may be available. Five more days to sign up. Please tell someone who may want to take this. I will not be facilitating this class again until Fall.
3) Frida Kahlo Lives at T.A.M.
Frida Kahlo: Images of an Icon
February 3 – June 10, 2007


Images of an Icon offers a means of seeing Frida Kahlo’s world through the eyes of those who surrounded her. Modern masters of the camera such as Lucienne Bloch, Emmy Lou Packard, Florence Arquin, and Manuel Alvarez Bravo, as well as leading photojournalists such as Giselle Freund, Bernard Silberstein, and Fritz Henle captured her in their lenses. Kahlo’s relatives, lovers, and friends, including Guillermo Kahlo, Nickolas Muray, and Lola Alvarez Bravo were witness to a more intimate Frida. The images span Kahlo’s life and follow the artist from precocious child to famous artist. They permit a look into her bedroom, a seat at her table, a visit to her hospital room, a stroll through her garden, and a view into her collections. There is an ancillary component to the exhibition featuring the work of Northwest artists who have been inspired by Kahlo, the artist and icon. A Paul Nelson poem inspired by this exhibit.
4) Alexandra Oliver does not have an iconic unibrow, BUT makes up for it in wit and, unlike Frida, is Canadian and has a new book coming out. From Alexandra:
Hi Everyone,

As you may (or may not) know, I'll be launching my first book on May 11 in Vancouver. As I'm an old-fashioned sort, I'm sending out non-virtual invites. If you haven't sent me your snail mail address, please do so ASAP! For more information, check out http://vancouverevents.blogspot.com I look forward to seeing you. It's going to be a humdinger of an evening.

Alexandra
5) Write in the Woods 2007 Bill Ransom, keynoter.
Saturday, May 19, also Derek Sheffield, Tim McNulty, Elizabeth She, Allen Braden and others. Shelton, WA 8:30-4:30, gourmet lunch and only $49 bucks. Really. No website, but email WritingConference@oc.ctc.edu. At Olympic College Shelton.
6) "SPF07 Workshop 8: Sound Poetry - Christine Hume and Nico Vassilakis"

April 22nd, 12:00 to 1:00am, Hug-O-House

Workshop only $5
(Admission for the Seattle Poetry Festival is required in addition to your workshop ticket.)

http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/10795
(for tix and/or more info)

Instructors Christine Hume and Nico Vassilakis introduce students to multiple ways of approaching the relationship between sound and poetry. We will listen to poetry as soundscapes, training our attention to acoustic and phonetic aspects of language and speech. We will indulge ourselves in the kinesthetic pleasures, the ecstatic spiraling repetition and rhyme, the alchemy of articulations and de-articulations in performed and concrete poetry. This workshop will consider how we might renovate the traditional poetry reading--and conventional notions of poetry itself--by making use of a broad range of media. The instructors will present a variety of listening experiences, followed by a sound poetry experiment.

Max Number of Participants: 15
7) Langston Hughes African-American Film Festival.

April 21-27.
The Langston Hughes African American Film Festival is just around the corner and this years festival marks the most ambitious collection of films yet!

This years festival provides a bountiful array of 45 (and counting) narratives, documentaries, shorts, animated films and a host of filmmaker talk-backs, special workshops and activities highlighting films by and about black folk from around the world and in our own backyard. Highlights include a 'revolutionary' Opening Night and a special family-friendly closing night featuring a Black Cowboy demonstration. Check out the schedule

8) Madeline DeFrees in Redmond.

SoulFood Poetry Night, Thursday April 19, 7 to 9 pm at SoulFood Books, 15748 Redmond Way, Redmond , WA. Featured readers this year’s Pulitzer Nominee Madeline DeFrees and her former student, Thomas Aslin. Open mic follows. Free. For directions, visit www.soulfoodbooks.com or call the store at 425-881-5309. For further info contact welchm@aol.com or moonlit.cloud@yahoo.com.

9) www.poetsencyclopedia.com

Charles Potts and Jeremy Gaulke are providing an exemplary service to the Poetry Community. Check out their handiwork and get your bio to them.

OK, I am off to Baxterland to introduce Bart, wish the finalists luck and answer any pre-event questions, make sure sacrificial poets Lyn Coffin (reigning champ) and Alexandra Oliver don't scratch each other's eyes out, have my daily 30 minute walk, perhaps around Cal Anderson Park and kick myself for forgetting some cool events which coulda been e-fishwrapped.

Ciao,

Paulo

Paul E. Nelson
www.GlobalVoicesRadio.org
www.SPLAB.org
Slaughter, WA 98002
253.735.6328 or 888.735.6328

Want off this email list? Just ask.
For Immediate Release
Contact: Paul E. Nelson
Global Voices Radio/SPLAB!
908 I St. N.E. #4
Slaughter, WA 98002 253.735.6328


Global Voices Radio / SPLAB! E-Fishwrapper

In this E-Fishwrapper, Luis Rodriguez Reading tonight, Organic Poetry, Internet Connections (Jim Andrews, Bob Marcacci), Judith Rolche, Alexandra Oliver & AG anniversary.

1) Luis Rodriguez Reading tonight at Town Hall at 7 p.m.
Town Hall Seattle, 1119 8th Avenue, Seattle
Award-winning poet, author, activist, publisher, and teacher Luis J. Rodriguez for talk, reading, and conversation. "Imagining Peace and Community in a Time of Violence and Chaos" Free admission. For more info, call 206.386.4636.

2) Organic Poetry, Organismic Cosmology

Organic Poetry with Paul Nelson (The testimonial to end all testimonials. Really.)
Is the universe a machine with a dominant ethos of competition, or an organism based on interdependence, process and relationship? A stance-toward-poem-making based on the latter, Organic Poetry, allows the moment of composition to be an occasion of experience, or an experiment in consciousness.

This workshop for serious people of all levels of writing experience includes discussion of poets Charles Olson, Robert Duncan, Anne Waldman, Joanne Kyger, Gary Snyder and Michael McClure, sound from these poets discussing poetics and reading their poems, and writing exercises designed to help you allow the act of writing to be an exhilarating revelation of content.

Hugo House, 1634 11th, Seattle. Thursdays, April 12-May 17, 10 a.m.-12 p.m. $195 ($180 members) Some scholarships may be available. Five more days to sign up. Please tell someone who may want to take this. I will not be facilitating this class again until Fall.

3) How Connections are Made On-Line.

Last Friday at the Good Shepherd Center on Sunnyside in Seattle, I attended the night of Visual and Sound Poetry. Nico Vassilakis, Geof Huth, Crag Hill and Jim Andrews were featured and it was an incredible evening of challenging and engaging poetry. Jim Andrews lives in Victoria, but speaks highly of his time in Seattle, saying it helped open him up to multi-media poetry possibilities.

His unfinished (interactive) sound poem Nio is addictive, so you have been warned. His on-line essay on Lionel Kearns is also remarkable in terms of content and presentation. Quite engaging, and it includes two short films featuring Lionel's work. It requires Shockwave and Quicktime. (Once you download Quicktime say NO to Apple updates. They want to I-Pod you. ARGH!) Lionel was in attendance Friday night and had copies of his new selected poems A Few Words Will Do and I love this work. http://www.TalonBooks.com

4) How Connections are Made On-Line II.

So, browsing Jim's site I came across the name of a man who recently saw my post on the Suny-Buffalo listserv and axed to be added to the E-Fishwrapper. Bob Marcacci has this poetry podcast in a style that is part cool late night jazz d.j. and part world music, world poetry, global interconnection extraordinaire.

5) Write in the Woods 2007 Bill Ransom, keynoter.

Saturday, May 19, also Derek Sheffield, Tim McNulty, Elizabeth She, Allen Braden and others. Shelton, WA 8:30-4:30, gourmet lunch and only $49 bucks. Really. No website, but email WritingConference@oc.ctc.edu. At Olympic College Shelton.

6) Judith Roche with a new Book.

ANNOUNCING
The Wisdom of the Body
a new poetry collection by Judith Roche from Black Heron Press

Readings
today! April 5
Greenwood Senior Center
525 N. 85th, Seattle, 206 297-0815
Judith Roche with Greenwood Poets
lunch 12:30, contact Greenwood Senior Center for reservations
Readings 1:00 pm, poetry workshop 1:45- 2:30 pm. Free

April 11
Elliott Bay Book Company reading
104 S. Main, Seattle, 206
7:30 pm

April 24 (corrected date!)
“An Evening with Judith Roche,” produced by Raven Chronicles
Hugo House, 7:00 pm
1632 11th, Seattle, 206 322-7030
co-sponsored by Richard Hugo House and Raven
Chronicles

April 28
Burning Word Festival, Whidbey Island
www.washingtonpoets.org/burning_word.php
9:00 am workshop
5:25 pm reading
Only $15.00 admission for festival which also features George Bowering.

7) Alexandra Oliver, Elizabeth Austen, Michael Spence, Aaron Silverberg at Fremont Library Saturday.

Saturday, April 7 from 3:00 to 4:30 p.m.
Fremont Library, 731 N 35th St., Seattle
Washington Poets Association presents a poetry reading featuring Elizabeth Austen, Alexandra Oliver, Michael Spence, and Aaron Silverberg. Followed by open mike. Refreshments compliments of Starbucks Coffee. Contact 206.684.4084 in celebration of Barbara K. Nelson's 42nd birthday.

8) Presidential Candidate Poetry.

Not Hillary!

9) Allen Ginsberg died ten years ago today.

Thanks to J. Glen Evans and his Poets West calendar for some of these events. http://poetswest.org/venues.htm

Paul E. Nelson
www.GlobalVoicesRadio.org
www.SPLAB.org
Slaughter, WA 98002
253.735.6328 or 888.735.6328

Want off this email list? Just ask.