Toothache Duets

Toothache Duets is a durational project that enables impossible collaborations.

It is an online platform that hosts a duet of two artists every week for a year.

We invite artists from all over the world to send a one-minute video of any topic/nature for the purpose of creating an online duet. Just upload your video on youtube and send us the URL. We will then collate the videos, and, as curators, we will choose two each week to create the duet. The videos most viewed will be exhibited in a gallery space in London at the end-of-year-celebration party!

Do you have an idea you always wanted to try out?

Have you always wanted to create work side by side with another?

Send your video link by email to info@toothacheduets.com

For further details please visit http://www.toothacheduets.com/call-for-videos

cris cheek: a preview

cris cheek will perform at The Other Room on June 27th at The Castle Hotel, 66 Oldham Street, Manchester, M4 1LE. This film is of his performance at the Southwest Ohio Poets festival. For more, you can read some of his work at Jacket, this interview at the Poetry Foundation, or his Wikipedia page.

cris cheek: poet, artist, interdisciplinary performer and director of creative writing at Miami University in south-west Ohio, makes a rare visit to Manchester. He has a herstory of collaborative and transdisciplinary practice; as co-founder of Chisenhale Dance Space where he worked alongside Mary Prestidge and with Ghislaine Boddington with whom he founded Shinkansen and cocurated the Voice Over festival. For seventeen years he worked in various text-sound combinations with Sianed Jones, including Slant (with Phillip Jeck). He taught performance writing at Dartington College of Arts during which time he made a substantive body of performance writing with Kirsten Lavers under the moniker TNWK (things not worth keeping). Since then he’s been making and showing works in spoken and projected text-sound, such as Impluperfections and b a c k l i t. Most recent publications include the church, the school, the beer (Critical Document, 2007) and part : short life housing (The Gig, 2009).

The other performers will be Sarah Crewe and Lewis Freedman.

Two London events

Tuesday, 18 June: 7.00 at the Daniel Blau Gallery, Hoxton Square, London E:  Amid the Ruins. Kristen Kreider & James Leary, Allen Fisher, Becky Cremin and Stephen Willey. FREE

Wednesday, 19 June: 6.00 at the University of London Senate House: Contemporary Innovative Poetry Research Seminar. Richard Parker: ‘Ezra Pound: Belated Modernism and objectivist Verse’. All Welcome.

SoundEye 2013

 

The SoundEye poetry festival now in its 17th year will take place July 5th-7th. Details of readers can be found at the SoundEye site. Readers include Lila Matsumoto, Sophie Robinson, Joel Scott, Denise Riley, David Lloyd, Ulf Stolterfoht, Andrea Brady, Redell Olsen, Trevor Joyce and Catherine Walsh.

Sarah Crewe: a preview


Sarah Crewe will perform at The Other Room on June 27th at The Castle Hotel, Oldham Street, Manchester. For a flavour of her work, watch this clip of Sarah performing with Jo Langton at the Enemies of the North event in Manchester in March 2013. For more of her work, try her poems in Litter and Peony Moon, or samples from her recently published collection flick invicta at the Oystercatcher Press site.

Sarah Crewe is from the Port of Liverpool. Her chapbooks include flick invicta from Oystercatcher and Signs Of The Sistership with Sophie Mayer, from Knives Forks and Spoons. She is one third of Stinky Bear Press and her work has featured in Shearsman, Tears In The Fence and Litter magazines. She also starred as the little girl in the Trio biscuit advert.

The other readers will be cris cheek and Lewis Freedman. Previews of both to follow.

David Gaffney and Gregory Norminton book launches in Manchester

6.00 for 6.30, Thursday 13 June, Takk café, Tariff street, Manchester
In addition to short readings from both authors there will be a unique spoken word DJ set by Monkeys In Love, and drinks supplied by the amazing Barefoot Wines.
David Gaffney, More Sawn-Off Tales
‘Evanescent moments of connection and happiness. One hundred and fifty words by Gaffney are more worthwhile than novels by a good many others.’  The Guardian
In his fourth collection of short stories, David Gaffney reprises the format of his critically acclaimed Sawn-Off Tales; a brand-new set of pieces exactly 150 words long, each aiming to contain the breadth and depth of an epic. In stories that are laugh-out-loud funny, cringingly weird and desperately sad, Gaffney introduces the possibility of momentary actions that change everything; a swimming man sees a hundred glass eyes at the bottom of a river; a broken vase causes a couple to re-examine their place in the universe; a zoo with only three animals makes a man reconsider the value of everything; and a comedian decides to express himself through the medium of smell. Relationships begin, stutter, then crash to earth, each mundane transaction peeling away the everyday to reveal a canyon of emotion. An expert miniaturist with the ability to stuff an elephant inside a flea.
Gregory Norminton, Thumbnails
‘A writer who relishes every sentence, and gives it moral weight, and yet still manages to come up with a page-turner.’ Prospect Magazine
Thumbnails consists of forty-eight stories short enough to fit into the nooks and crannies of our distracted lifestyles. A Portuguese naturalist loses his life’s work to Napoleon; sexual love flourishes briefly in a retirement home; a grief-stricken father searches the Australian outback for signs of an extinct lizard; Mephistopheles answers his critics and explains the real origins of Shakespeare’s Hamlet; a roguish life is reduced to endnotes in a biography; an Anglo- Saxon bard despairs of his vocation. Myth, social comedy, tragedy and speculative fiction follow one another in tales that vary widely in form and content – united by the task of conveying a complete narrative with the greatest possible economy.

FOOTSY INDEX

footsy index

A night of poetry taking place at Inland Studios, 1st floor (above The Stormbird Pub), 25a Camberwell Church Street, Camberwell, SE5 8TR. 7.30pm Tuesday 4th June, with readings by David Berridge, Jeff Hilson and Richard Makin.

Poetry and the Dictionary

This symposium will be held at St Peter’s College, Oxford on 15 June, 2013. Charlotte Brewer, Professor of English in the University of Oxford, will deliver the opening address, and Peter Gilliver, who is currently writing a history of the Oxford English Dictionary, will also be contributing. More here.

Art (and/or?) Writing

Via Tamarin Norwood:

Keeping Time Again

At the end of our year-long collaborative residency between Italy and the UK, we’re celebrating with screening and discussion events in London and Abruzzo. I’ve been working with Italian pianist Rossella Rubini to produce a new video artwork called ‘Keeping Time Again’.
http://www.tamarinnorwood.co.uk/keeping-time-again-london-abruzzo/
Friday 31 May, 7pm in Abruzzo, Italy
Friday 7 June, Central Saint Martins, King’s Cross London N1C 4AA

Musica Practica at Platform33
Following its performances at Tate Britain and Modern Art Oxford, my conducting piece ‘Musica Practica’ is returning to London as part of Platform33’s biggest event to date. As it’s P33 I’ll be giving an informal talk about my work over the course of the evening, along with conductor Anthony Weeden. Details and other contributors here:
http://www.tamarinnorwood.co.uk/sunday-musica-practica-at-kings-place/
Sunday 2 June, 4pm at King’s Place, London N1 9AG

Dawn Chorus on twitter
Next weekend I’m one of seven writers each stationed at a National Trust property for the night, up before dawn to lead a mass observation on Twitter. An original idea of Natasha Vicars, the project was developed through the Live Art Development Agency DIY initiative, and this will be its third iteration. (yes that really is 2:45 in the morning)
http://www.tamarinnorwood.co.uk/dawn-chorus/
Sunday 9 June, 2:45am-5am on twitter: #dawnchorus

Enemigos

May Thursday 30th. 7.30pm. Free entry
The Rich Mix Arts Centre.

Tom Chivers – David Berridge – Tim Atkins – Carol Watts – SJ Fowler – Jeff Hilson – Holly Pester
+ Noelia Diaz Vicedo & Jose Gianuzzi Armijo

This unique collaborative poetic enterprise between two of the world’s metropolis’ and their poets will see readings in both cities, in both languages. Beginning with the London event on May 30th, a host of British poets will read their work, written or adapted for the project, followed by versions of a selection of those poems in Spanish, not translated but transliterated, depending on the methodology, means or style of their opposite number in Mexico city.

Thus the Enemigos project will not just commission new poems by 16 poets, but in the transition process between cities, countries and languages, wholly original new works that mirror and and shadow those original pieces. All will be published collectively by the Mexican publishing house EBL Cielo Abierto in late 2013, at the Mexico city reading in November. This reading, at the rich mix arts centre, is a chance to hear a selection of the most interesting British poets read their work and its Spanish language spawnings.

Launch of Alba Londres #04

June 4th at 7pm at Instituto Cervantes, 102 Eaton Square, London SW1W 9AN. The following Chilean poets will read in Spanish:

Javier Bello
Carmen García
Gustavo Barrera
Special guest poet: Julio Carrasco.

Sarah Kelly and David Ashford will read the English translations.

June 7th at 7.30pm at Contemporary Poetics Research Centre at Birkbeck College, Room 539. The following Chilean poets will read in Spanish:

Javier Bello
Carmen García
Gustavo barrera
Special guest: Julio Carrasco, Andrés Anwandter and mmmmm (Adrian Fisher & Montenegro)

Sarah Kelly and David Ashford will once again read the translations.