Hay on Wye Poetry Jamboree

HAY POETRY JAMBOREE

JUNE 3rd – 5th 2010
Oriel Gallery of Contemporary Art

June 3rd

6.30 – 7.30 p.m. Festival Launch Reception
7.30 – 9 15 p.m. Childe Roland
Robert Minhinnick

June 4th

11.00 – noon Word Cloud, with Susie Wild
2.00 – 4.00 p.m. Keri Finlayson, Scott Thurston, Anthony Mellors,
Claudia Azzola, Samantha Wynne Rhydderch,
John Goodby
5.00 – 6.00 p.m. Zoe Brigley, lecture: Surrealism and Welsh Poetry
7.30 – 9.15 p.m. Geraldine Monk, Alan Halsey

June 5th

11.00 – noon Phil Maillard, Ric Hool, Richard Gwyn
2.00 – 6.00 p.m. Randolph Healy, Ian Davidson, Zoe Skoulding with
Poetry Wales, Jean Portante. Art events: Kathryn
Ashill, The Quantum Brothers, and more…
7.30 – 9.15 p.m. Elisabeth Bletsoe
Caroline Bergvall
9.30 – 10.30 p.m. Grande Finale – Chicken of the Woods

Oriel Gallery, Salem Chapel, Bell Bank, Hay on Wye
Entrance to 7.30 events £5 (Concessions £3). All other events FREE

goodbard@yahoo.co.uk

3am magazine presents contemporary Romanian poetry

Via Steven Fowler:

3am magazine presents contemporary Romanian poetry – Elena Vladareanu, Ruxandra Novac and Adrian Urmanov.

The Rich Mix arts centre, London (Shoreditch / Brick Lane) – Saturday May 29th – 7pm – Entrance free to all http://www.richmix.org.uk

For the first of the Maintenant interview series readings 3am magazine presents three of the most exciting and acerbic contemporary poets emerging from Romania since the millenium. Challenging, caustic and resolute, their poetry retains the dark humour so prevalent under dictatorship with the utterly modern vernacular of a generation that has come to fruition post-1989. Attacks on misogyny, sexual repression, political idealism and linguistic correctness are interspersed with exactingly crafted free poetry, literary and resounding, distinct for it’s energy and image, and despite a textual tendency to the climactic, this reading will remain very much literary in style. Performing as part of a national tour, this is a chance to see the brightest young talent from a distinct and vivid European poetical tradition.

Selections of their work have recently been published by Cleaves Journal http://www.cleavesjournal.com/issue2/romania/romania2.htm.

Interviews with each poet are available here at 3am, Cadaverine and Pomegranate magazines respectively.
http://www.3ammagazine.com/3am/maintenant-2-elena-vladareanu/
http://www.pomegranate.me.uk/submission/read/well-sing-for-the-third-millenium-an-interview-with-ruxandra-novac
http://web.mac.com/thecadaverine/Site/Interviews/Entries/2010/2/3_Adrian_Urmanov.html

this work im doin i dont kno what it is

this work im doin i dont kno what it is: poems for the eye, exhibited and hidden in the Henry Moore Institute Library by Philip Davenport

Philip Davenport’s poems insist on the importance of reading, but not as stiffness, or adherence to tradition – the opposite – the emphasis is on a kind of wayward thoughtfulness and imaginative investment. Davenport is conscious of his work neither being sacrosanct nor easily-absorbed signage. He carefully adds words up – omissions, divisions, extensions and provoking grammatical errors are as calculated as metric verse – and themes are both flashed cryptically between the text and conducted so as to cast a shadow over the whole, as if one needs to be at once at a distance and right inside the poems.

Spreadsheets of Light, Davenport’s most recent project, is debuted in this exhibition. These are poems as spreadsheets, with words substituting numbers. They present moral dilemmas as accountancy – war crimes, celebrity death, or the act of shopping – the impossible necessity of adding up atrocities and banality to come up with an adequate answer. Each spreadsheet is accompanied by what Davenport describes as a “word-abacus” – sculptural works whose dual role as poem and counting instrument reinforces the importance of form in these works. So, dozens of broken eggshells become symbols for smashed skulls; a poem is inscribed within these fragments. Davenport wants his poems to interfere with our expectations of the library space, yet their dual visual/literal nature also harmonises with the sculptural research setting.

Heart Shape Pornography is ‘found text’ written onto apples; extracted from pornographic material by cutting out a heart-shaped cross-section, and reproduced on an object itself heavily symbolic, with the sometimes prosaic, sometimes prurient, words literally on the flesh of the fruit. This fracturing of original text is continued in the Imaginary Missing People – made by collaging missing person’s notices with text from Davenport’s diary. The missing people are bookmarks hidden between pages at HMI library. Unexplained breaks suffered in personal narratives are a dark contrast to the minutely-researched histories of sculptors.

On 5 May Philip Davenport will be a ‘reader in residence’ in the library – looking at work from the Institute’s Special Collections and pleased to answer any enquiries regarding his work.

Exhbition runs 27th April-7 June 2010
Henry Moore Institute
74 The Headrow
Leeds
LS1 3AH
UK

Counting Backwards

At last I can let you know about a new series of events in Manchester.

For a few weeks now Richard Barrett, Gary Fisher and myself have been working on a new series of text-sound-performance events called Counting Backwards.

Beginning Thursday 3 June 2010, Counting Backwards will take as its starting point contemporary text-sound practices that question semantics and received traditions, and emphasise performability.

Counting Backwards takes place at Fuel Cafe Bar in Withington on the first Thursday of alternate months. Entry is free. The flyer for our launch event is below.

Via Matt Dalby

Maintenant live event

To mark the tenth edition of the Maintenant interview series…

The 3am magazine Maintenant series aims to evidence, through discussion with Europe’s most exceptional young poets, the continued pertinence of poetry for a new generation of talent from a diverse selection of European poetic traditions. The interviews, and the poetry that accompanies them, have shown the slow dissolution of stylistic recalcitrance, internal bias to gender and race, methodological snobbery and poetical jingoism. The fusion of poetic expression inevitable in a world of increased communication, access and political freedom is remarkable and cause for optimism where so often there is pessimism in poetry circles. The range and depth of poetry on display, and it’s standard, is a small representation of what each nation is producing.

The Maintenant dictum is to introduce poets that might lie outside of the Anglo-American scene, or be overlooked until they have reached the prominence of middle age. Though not an orthodoxy, we also aim to introduce poets who might be considered experimental or seminal.

The series is published each Sunday at www.3ammagazine.com and features an extensive interview coupled with a selection of poetry of the poet’s choosing in English translation. The first ten editions can be found below, with links to both interview and poetry.

The first Maintenant reading to accompany the series will take place Saturday May 29th at the Rich Mix arts centre in London, located near Brick Lane. www.richmix.org.uk Three Romanian poets – Adrian Urmanov, Ruxandra Novac and maintenant featured Elena Vladareanu will be in attendance to read recent work. Entrance is free and the event begins at 7pm.

More about Maintenant here.

Third Text Festival – Calls For Submissions

The third international Text Festival in Bury, Manchester, UK, will open on 29 April 2011.

Project proposals and submissions are invited – in any artform (sound, media, poetry, visual art, etc) using language in innovative ways. As I have mentioned over the last few months the shape of the next festival has been forming, with some great things in place already. There are more venues and new approaches. In addition to the open call, you can submit ideas in response to 4 projected exhibition themes:

1.Duchamp
2.Sentences
3.Visual Poetry
4.Artists’ Books

Electronic submission (preferred) to

t.trehy@bury.gov.uk

or by mail to

Text Festival
Bury Art Gallery
Moss St
Bury
BL9 ODR

Via Tony Trehy

Knives Forks and Spoons second event

We will be holding another of our massively popular book launches. It will take the form of a seminar at the Crescent pub in Salford. Bring a poem if you fancy.

Tuesday 13th April Starts 7pm

Readers:

Matt Dalby,

Simon Rennie,

Alec Newman.

There will also be a bookstall of proportions as yet unseen by mankind. It will have an old headscarf on it!

via Alec Newman

David Osbaldeston: Out of Time – preview and exhibition

Castlefield Gallery is pleased to present a solo show of new work by David Osbaldeston, Out of Time (The Light of Day / The Action of the Play). Through manipulated images of news photography and a print series of interpretive book cover designs from Luigi Pirandello’s[1] celebrated play Six Characters in Search of an Author[2], the exhibition will explore relationships between the gallery and theatre staging, displacement, reality, illusion and social discord.

David Osbaldeston: Out of Time (The Light of Day / The Action of the Play) Preview: Thursday 15 April, 2010. 6-9pm – Everyone Welcome. Exhibition Continues: Friday 16 April – Sunday 6 June 2010
At Castlefield Gallery

British and Irish Journal 2 launch

In advance of the imminent publication of the Journal of British and Irish Innovative Poetry Volume 2, Number 1 (see http://www.gylphi.co.uk/poetry), a launch event will be held at University of Cork in association with SoundEye.

Featuring papers by Alex Davis, Sam Ladkin, Robert Sheppard and Scott Thurston.

Venue: University College Cork, O’Rahilly Building, Room 1.23, Cork City, Ireland, 16 March 2010, 6 pm – 7 pm.

Directions: http://www.ucc.ie/en/VisitorstoUCC/Transportmapsandparking/Maps/

Poster (PDF):
http://www.scribd.com/full/27468552?access_key=key-13fj15l8ams7kkokrdyo