Advanced warning: Final Openned

opennednov2009

If you’ve planned on getting to Openned but never have now’s your last chance. Farewell (for now) to a great night and venue.

Readers:

Andrea Brady
Ian Heames
Antony John
Geraldine Monk
Linus Slug
Timothy Thornton

Date: Wednesday 25th November
Time: 7.30pm
Location: The Foundry, London
Admission: Free

A Writer’s Guide to Social Media with Adrian Slatcher

chorlton-book-fest

Advance warning of what will no doubt be a very interesting session as part of the Chorlton Book Festival:

A Writer’s Guide to Social Media
Writer Adrian Slatcher advises arts organisations on their use of social media at Manchester Digital Development Agency. He’ll show how writers are using the web for writing, marketing and publishing their work. Whether an experienced or novice writer, published or not, this workshop will give you all the ideas you need to enhance your own online presence.

Wednesday 18 November, 7.30pm
Chorlton Library

LINK

Small Publishers’ Fair 2009

SMALL PUBLISHERS FAIR 2009

Friday/Saturday 13th/14th November, 11am to 7pm

Conway Hall, Red Lion Square, London WC1R 4RL

Poetry presses include Colin Sackett, Coracle, Essence, Leafe/Bamboo, Moschatel, Reality Street, Shearsman, Veer & West House.

Exhibition of vintage NY mimeos curated by Les Coleman & John Janssen

Saturday afternoon readings:

1.30 Royal Holloway Poetic Practice: Sejal Chad, Becky Cremin, Ryan Ormonde, Karen Sandhu
2.00 Shearsman Books: Linda Black & John Welch
2.30 Kurt Johannesen: Everything & Nothing
3.00 Les Coleman: Written, Drawn & Stapled (NY mimeos)
3.30 Road Books: Judy Kravis
4.00 Loose Teeth Press: Joey Comeau
4.30 Reality Street: Wendy Mulford
5.00 Light-Trap Press: Angela Gardner
5.30 Veer Books & Torque Press: Will Rowe, Piers Hugill, Aodan McCardle, Tony Trehy, Antony John & Carol Watts
Free admission to fair & readings

Poetry Library Special Collections and Artists’ Book Open Day

Poetry Library Special Collections and Artists’ Book Open Day

Sunday 15 November 2009

 From the first drafts of Joyce’s Finnegan’s Wake in the magazine Transition (1927) and the beginnings of Philip Larkin’s and Simon Armitage’s careers in pamphlet form, The Poetry Library collection includes the whole range of poetry publications since 1912. The Library invites you to an open display of posters, pamphlets, artists’ books, postcards and magazines from its various collections. With items from early modernism through to the Beat and Concrete movements, take this chance to engage with the underworld of nearly a century of poetry, including works on display from TS Eliot, Ian Hamilton Finlay, Robert Creeley and Sarah Lucas.

Also includes a section ‘mail out poetry’ with Matchbox

Link

Does the art world have little knowledge of contemporary poetry?

Caroline Bergvall reviews the Poetry Marathon:

I’m writing in from London where I’ve recently been part of a highly ambitious poetry event. The internationally reputed Serpentine Gallery in Hyde Park has for the past 4 years been hosting a mad type of event, an annual 36 hours live event, a more or less non-stop art marathon of presentations. This year they decided to create it as a Poetry Marathon. Some 50 poets were slated to take part, each reading for approx. 15 mins—a decent time given the chain of readings and the expected strained attention span.

The event has been summarized in great detail online, complete with program notes, introductory remarks by the curator and high-end cultural entrepreneur Hans Ulrich Obrist, as well as pics and comments on many of the readers. Although amazing, I have to admit the event has left me thoughtful…

Read more

Openned presents ‘basemeta’

In the basement of the Foundry, Old Street, London, from 18:30 to 23:30 on the 25th of March 2009, poets Becky Cremin and Ryan Ormonde documented the entire Openned poetry reading from before it started to well after it had finished. This reading was the eighteenth in the series. From this they produced a document called basemeta.

In some of the recordings of the 18th Openned night you can catch occasional glimpses of them or hear the gentle tap of typewriter keys as they produced the documentation.

basemeta was performed at the next Openned night and their performance of this document can be viewed here. However, the documentation also stands as a poem in its own right and is an excellent piece of work and is available here for free and will be permanently available from our Nights Documentation page.

Click HERE to link to blog entry for free downloadable pdf and links to visual material

Two more Matthew Welton dates

One at MMU with Jeremy Over and Richard Price

And one at Bolton Octagon with Paul Griffiths

With Jeremy Over and Richard Price

MMU and Carcanet invite you to the Manchester launch for
‘We needed coffee but…’
by Matthew Welton
&
Deceiving Wild Creatures
by Jeremy Over

Free entry

on Thursday 29th October at 6.30pm
in Lecture Theatre 6, Geoffrey Manton building

With Paul Griffiths

Monday 2 November 2009
8pm
Bolton Octagon
£4

Poetry Marathon

Get down to London if you can with short notice would be well worth it…

Park Nights
Poetry Marathon
Saturday and Sunday
17–18 October

Poetry Marathon is a two-day poetry event featuring performances from leading poets, writers, artists, philosophers, scholars and musicians. It is the fourth in the innovative series of Marathons staged in the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion each year, conceived by Serpentine Gallery Co-director Hans Ulrich Obrist. The first Marathon, Interview Marathon, 2006, involved interviews with leading figures in contemporary culture over 24-hours, conducted by Obrist and architect Rem Koolhaas. This was followed by Experiment Marathon, 2007, which included 50 experiments by speakers across arts and science, and Manifesto Marathon, 2008.

Participants include Vito Acconci, Etel Adnan, Caroline Bergvall, Kenneth Bostock, Nathan Cash Davidson, Jimmie Durham, Dominic Eichler, Gilbert & George, Olivier Garbay, Kenneth Goldsmith, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, Tim Griffin, Eugen Gomringer, Karl Holmqvist, Ranjit Hoskote, Nick Laird, Sean Landers, Maria Mirabal, Eileen Myles, Gerhard Rühm, Mladen Stilinovic, UbuWeb, Franz West and Cerith Wyn Evans

Tickets
£25/£20 (two day)
£15/£10 (one day)

Available from the Gallery Lobby Desk or
Ticketweb: 08444 77 1000
http://www.ticketweb.co.uk

http://www.serpentinegallery.org/2009/06/poetry_marathonsaturday_and_su.html

Via Caroline Bergvall

Jaime Birch – review of The Other Room 11

Thanks are due to Jaime Birch for reviewing last weeks reading with Michael Haslam and Craig Dworkin:

The 11th reading in The Other Room series was just super – one of my favourites, I think. Craig Dworkin, the first reader, couldn’t be with us in the flesh, and so he’d had himself recorded, reading three pieces of his work. We were shown this film of his during the first part of the evening via a projector. It was great. The video is posted on the site’s home page and, enjoyable as it is to watch on the computer, it was better on the night, on the big screen. We felt like Craig was with us somehow. We gave him a round of applause when he’d finished. If you weren’t there, you should have been. It was very cool and jazzy. It was, for me, all about wry, funky translations of existing texts. Craig said it was ‘conceptual’. It was good fun.

Michael Haslam read next and he too was really good. His poetry seemed more warm and humane than some of the more fragmented, ‘experimental’ stuff that you often find at The Other Room. His poems seemed to have clearer narratives and characters. And he read with gusto; a real celebration of the spoken and written word.

Before he started to read, Michael talked a little bit about how he didn’t really feel like an experimental poet – ‘It may not be clear why I should be (if I am) linked with avantgardists and experimenters. The answer is, historical accident, or, like finding a place to live—having found a loose net of congenial spiritual company, I see no good reason to forgo it.’ (quoted from the internet, not the reading). On the actual night of the reading he said something about all poems being an experiment. I agree with him – the term ‘experimental’ is problematic for me too.
I liked his style. I would’ve bought one of his books had I not been broke as a joke.

So yes, the evening was brill. You, yes You, must come to the next one. Oh yeah, one more thing – poetry readings can sometimes be quite intimidating to walk into on you own can’t they? (yes) Well not at The Other Room! – I’m a girl, from Bolton, and I went there by myself. I was warmly welcomed, to be sure. There were quite a few young ladies there actually; more than usual. Anyway – Come to the next reading and join in the fun, I expect it will be bob on.

Journal of British and Irish Innovative Poetry launch events

There will be a series of launch events in
2009 for the Journal of British and Irish Innovative Poetry
(http://www.gylphi.co.uk/poetry).

The first of which will be a celebration of the journal occurring at Edge
Hill’s own celebration of its decade of poetics:

Edge Hill University
Education Building
8 October, 6.30 pm
(http://robertsheppard.blogspot.com/2009/09/going-public-autumn-2009.html)

The other two launch events will be standalone. There will be speeches and
discussion of the journal. As well as an opportunity for readers and
contributors to the journal to meet with editorial board members.

Birkbeck
University of London
Main Building (Room B29)
Malet Street WC1E 7HX
21 October, 7.30 pm
(http://www.bbk.ac.uk/maps)

University of Salford
9 December, 3 pm (tbc)
Featuring Christine Kennedy,
Allen Fisher and Ian Davidson
(http://www.salford.ac.uk/travel)

Via Anthony Levings, Managing Editor
Gylphi Limited, http://www.gylphi.co.uk

London Poetry Systems

Forthcoming events in London and Oxford organised by LPS:

LP06 – Will Stopha (multimedia poetry set); Huck (PsychoFolk extraordinaire – acoustic set); Special Guest (?); LPS poetasters and AV artists (AV poetry set from Henry Stead, Jef Oswald and Guy Bingley, poems from Jay Richards). 23/09/09.

LP07 – Zan Lyons; Caroline Bird; Yo Zushi and others tbc. 24/10/09.

More details of these events, plus picture poems and more at the LPS site.

The Other Room at Oxjam

oxjam

The Other Room will be presenting an extra event on Sunday 25th October as part of the Oxjam festival. The venue is Apotheca in Manchester’s Northern Quarter and the start is scheduled for 1 PM. We will have three readers:

  • Stuart Calton
  • James Davies
  • Tony Trehy
  • Click here to read more about Oxjam and here to go to the website for Apotheca.

    Next Openned

    The next Openned Poetry Reading (Land for Lajee Fundraiser) is on Tuesday 6th October at 7.15 pm. Confirmed poets so far are:

    • Sean Bonney
    • Sophie Robinson
    • Harry Gilonis
    • Josh Stanley
    • Tim Atkins
    • Nat Raha
    • Posie Rider
    • Peter Philpott
    • Alan Hay
    • Michael Zand
    • Amy De’Ath
    • Elizabeth-Jane Burnett
    • Frances Kruk
    • Raz
    • Andrea Brady
    • Justin Katko

    More TBA.

    Link

    Tina Darragh and Doug Lang

    One for those of you who reside stateside.

    September 12th
    Saturday, 8 p.m.
    at LOF/t
    120 W. North Ave.
    Baltimore, MD 21201

    Tina Darragh – Deep eco pré, Tina Darragh’s collaboration with poet Marcella Durand, will be published this fall as an ebook by Little Red Leaves. Darragh’s essay “Blame Global Warming on Thoreau?” is included in the )((eco (lang)(uage(reader)) forthcoming from Portable Press at Yo-Yo Labs. Along with Jane Sprague and Diane Ward, she participated in the belladonna Elders Series #8 (NYC, June 2009). Tina has no desire to maintain her persona as a mild-mannered librarian since Doug Lang included her in his blog on DC poets.

    Doug Lang – Doug Lang was born and raised in Wales, and has published poetry and novels in the UK. He came to DC in 1973, where he ran the Folio Reading Series in the late 1970s, and where he has taught writing at the Corcoran College of Art and Design since 1976. He was one of the poets representing DC at the recent Poetry of the 1970s conference at Orono. A collection of his selected poems, In the Works, is forthcoming from Edge Books.

    Link.

    Palestine

    The next Openned Poetry Reading (Land for Lajee Fundraiser) is on the 6th of October. Confirmed poets so far are:

    Sean Bonney, Sophie Robinson, Harry Gilonis, Josh Stanley, Jow Lindsay, Tim Atkins, Nat Raha, Michael Zand, with more T.B.A

    A flyer is in production at the moment but in the mean time for more information check the Openned Poetry Facebook Event.

    The poet Cathy Wagner suggested I read the blog body on the line. It is a very interesting blog written by an academic Marcy Newman who teaches at An Najah University in Nablus. Recently she posted a very interesting post about the Academic Boycott of Israeli Universities which is worth a read. Also she also posted up videos from the Palestine Festival Of Literature 2009 which I thought might be of interest.

    via Openned