Phonica: Two

Wednesday 13 April, 8pm
Jack Nealons, 165 Capel Street, Dublin 1
Admission Free

Phonica is a Dublin-based poetry and music venture with an emphasis on multiformity and the experimental. Conceived, curated and hosted by Christodoulos Makris and Olesya Zdorovetska, it aims to provide an outlet for the exploration and presentation of new ideas, a space where practitioners from different artforms can converse, and an environment conducive to collaborative enterprise and improvisation. For Phonica: Two, the curators will be joined by Fergus Kelly, James King, Paul Roe and Catherine Walsh to explore spaces between sound poetry, performance, new music, experimental poetics, invented instruments and collaboration. More here.

Poetry and Secrecy

Come to Newcastle! Come on the 29th of April and the 30th of April, to the new Institute of Humanities at Northumbria University, for the smell of fresh paint, poetry & papers, & come to:

FRIDAY: RIVET+
An evening of readings & discussions, from 17:00 onward, with:
Sean Bonney
Allen Fisher
Robert Hampson
Lisa Samuels
Rhys Trimble
(+ TBA)

SATURDAY: SYMPOSIUM

A symposium on poetry & secrecy, 10:00-18:30, with:
Tom Betteridge
Dorothy Butchard
James Byrne
David Grundy
Lisa Samuels
Ed Luker
Katharine Peddie
Jordan Savage
Vicki Sparrow
… who will be decrypting the deep goss around for instance Maurice Blanchot, Judith Butler, Fred Moten, Peter Manson, Anna Mendelssohn, Diane di Prima, Andrew Ridker (ed.), Luke Roberts, Connie Scozzaro & more.
It is free, but try & let us know you’re coming by e-mail or Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/events/799368806859537/). (ed.luker@northumbria.ac.ukian.davidson@northumbria.ac.uk).

Tripwire 10

New and out now

TRIPWIRE 10 * A Pestschrift for CAConrad, with an interview, prose, poems, & a play by CAConrad, plus TC Tolbert, Magdalena Zurawski, Frank Sherlock, Anne Boyer, Marianne Morris, Allison Cobb, Jen Coleman, d/wolach & Elizabeth Williamson, erica kaufman, Thom Donovan, along with work from Danielle LaFrance, Juliana Spahr, Lila Matsumoto & Samantha Walton, Sarah Hayden, Nibia Pastrana Santiago, Frances Kruk, Sheila Mannix,  Jenifer K Wofford, Alicia Cohen, Cesar Moro (trans. Esteban A. Quispe), Heriberto Yépez, ko ko thett, Steven Farmer, Nachoem Wijnberg (trans. David Colmer), Ghayath Almadhoun (trans. Catherine Cobham), Bert Stabler, Julian Francis Park on Claudia Rankine & Fred Moten, Tyrone Williams on Jocelyn Saidenberg, erica kaufman on Frank Sherlock, Eric Sneathen on Chris Nealon, William Rowe on Joshua Clover, Danny Hayward on Lucy Beynon & Lisa Jeschke, David W. Pritchard on Marie Buck, Kristin Palm on Wendy Walters, Linda Russo on Lorine Niedecker, James Sherry on Mei-Mei Berssenbrugge, Laura Moriarty on Syd Staiti, Nich Malone on Towards. Some. Air. (eds. De’Ath & Wah), & Ryan Gato on P. Inman. Cover by Yuh-Shioh Wong. 340 pages. April 2016. $15.

https://tripwirejournal.com/new-issues/

Through the Weather Glass poetry installation launches & tour – Lucy Burnett

through-the-weather-glass-route-map3

During 2016, an interactive installation version of Lucy Burnett’s hybrid novel, Through the Weather Glass (Knives Forks & Spoons 2015), is going on UK tour with the financial support of Arts Council England & Leeds Beckett University. Come join lead character Icarus on a Lewis Carrollian journey through the weather glass of climate change into the word beyond at one of three upcoming launch events:

19th April, The Kings Arms, Salford, 6.30 for 7pm – Launch & performance
20th April, Broadcasting Place, Leeds Beckett University, 5pm – Viewing & talk
21st April, Kava Café, Todmorden, 7pm – Viewing & participatory performance.

More here.

Rosanne Robertson: a preview

Rosanne Robertson will perform at the next Other Room on Wednesday 13th April. The other performers are Stuart Calton, Gary Fisher and Linda Kemp. Scroll down for previews of all three.

Rosanne Robertson is an artist based in Manchester from artist led space The Penthouse which she co founded and co runs. Working with performance, sculpture, assemblage and sound she explores tensions, anxieties and relationships between body, object and environment. Described by Dazed and Confused when selected by Doodlebug as one of the city’s ‘Emerging Ones’ as “working beneath the skin by any means possible”. Her work has been featured and released by The Wire and her live sound art series based from The Penthouse was described as “Elevating Manchester’s underground scene to the top floor of a tower block” by The Wire. Robertson’s solo residency project Risk Assessment at Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art was reviewed by contemporary art journal Corridor 8. Robertson has performed and exhibited worldwide from group exhibition For Posterity at Castlefield Gallery (Manchester) and Inside Out/Next Generation at K11 Art Foundation (Wuhan, China) to residencies in New York with Sluice__ /Norte Maar (London/Brooklyn). Recent sound and performance commissions for Call & Response by CFCCA have seen Robertson perform at places such as The Whitworth Art Gallery, Museum of Science and Industry and John Rylands Library.

Robertson was recently awarded Arts Council England Grants for the Arts for her research and development project TOO MUCH exploring the contemporary condition of anxiety via forms of performance sculpture and sound with a special focus on women and ideas of anxieties induced by violent displacement of women’s power and forms of breaking through masculine oppression. More here.

Nia Davies: Çekoslovakyalılaştıramadıklarımızdanmısınız or Long Words

screen-shot-2016-02-22-at-15-19-47

Inspired by the Turkish tongue-twister Çekoslovakyalılaştıramadıklarımızdanmısınız (Are you one of those we tried to make to be originating from Czechoslovakia?), the poems in this chapbook take their titles from the English translations of long words in various languages. These are words that can (barely) be translated as: ‘For those who were repeatedly unable to pick enough of small wood-sorrels in the past’, ‘To the least able to be making less understandable’, ‘For your [plural] continued behaviour as if you could not be desecrated. More here.

if p then q Easter sale

allcovers

if p then q has a big big sale on…

Things can’t get much cheaper than this! The following books are discounted until the end of May. Stock up on a bunch  and save on postage:

Beaulieu, Derek: The Unbearable Contact with Poets Was £5 Now £3.50
http://www.lulu.com/shop/derek-beaulieu/the-unbearable-contact-with-poets/paperback/product-22459074.html

Berridge, David: Bring the Thing Was £8 Now £3.20
http://www.lulu.com/shop/david-berridge/bring-the-thing/paperback/product-21883170.html

Clarke, Lucy Harvest: Silveronda Was £8 Now £3.20
http://www.lulu.com/shop/lucy-harvest-clarke/silveronda/paperback/product-21883115.html

Henderson, Derek: Thus &  Was £8 Now £3.20
http://www.lulu.com/shop/derek-henderson/thus/paperback/product-21883153.html

Inman. P: Written 1976-2013 Was £20 Now £14
http://www.lulu.com/shop/p-inman/written-1976-2013/paperback/product-21811308.html

Jaeger, Peter: A Field Guide to Lost Things Was £7 Now £4.90
http://www.lulu.com/shop/peter-jaeger/a-field-guide-to-lost-things/paperback/product-22259811.html

Jenks, Tom: * Was £8 Now £3.20
http://www.lulu.com/shop/tom-jenks/paperback/product-21883149.html

Jenks, Tom: A Priori Was £8 Now £3.20
http://www.lulu.com/shop/tom-jenks/a-priori/paperback/product-21883105.html

Jenks, Tom: Items Was £8 Now £4
http://www.lulu.com/shop/tom-jenks/items/paperback/product-21883182.html

Pester, Holly: Hoofs Was £8 Now £3.20
http://www.lulu.com/shop/holly-pester/hoofs/paperback/product-21883189.html

seekers of lice: Encyclops. £4 Now £2.40
http://www.lulu.com/shop/seekers-of-lice/encyclops/paperback/product-21883185.html

Terry, Philip: Advanced Immorality Was £8 Now £3.20
http://www.lulu.com/shop/philip-terry/advanced-immorality/paperback/product-21883191.html

Walker, Nathan: Action Score Generator Was £15 Now £11.25
http://www.lulu.com/shop/nathan-walker/action-score-generator/paperback/product-22018879.html

Williams, Chrissy: Epigraphs Was £4 Now £2
http://www.lulu.com/shop/chrissy-williams/epigraphs/paperback/product-21883163.htm

Gary Fisher: a preview

Gary Fisher will perform at our next event on Wednesday 13th April. The other performers are Stuart Calton, Linda Kemp and Rosanne Robertson. Scroll down for previews of Stuart and Linda, with a preview of Rosanne to appear here in the next few days.

​Gary Fisher is an artist and improviser who explores sounds, objects, actions, words and places through processes of experimentation and enquiry. He has made works for live radio, gallery installation, performance and published recordings. Central to the work is the on-going development of improvised playing, composing and recording practises exploring intersections between analogue and digital, acoustic and electronic, composed and accidental. He is particularly interested in using found sounds and materials, the amplification of objects and surfaces and site-specific responses.

After graduating from the University of Salford in 2008 with BA in Visual Arts and already focussing on sound, Gary went on to develop his work independently for a number of years before joining the Masters in Sound Arts programme chaired by David Toop at The London College of Communication and graduating in 2015.

Working solo and collaboratively Gary has created various live, recorded and site-based works including: the experimental radio broadcast The Inaugural Terminal Program on Resonance FM London with artists Barry Dean and Gilda Manfring; a group improvisation as YARD Collective in the 50th anniversary installation of Allan Kaprow’s YARD at The Hepworth Wakefield for David Toop and Rie Nakajima’s Sculpture series. In 2015 he played in an ensemble with Christian Marclay, Thurston Moore, members of London Sinfonietta and CRISAP for Marclay’s major exhibition at White Cube London; during press week of Venice Biennale featured in Rob Pruitt’s Flea Market with Gilda Manfring and in collaboration with the School For Curatorial Studies Venice and during April 2015 Gary was artist in residence for Noise Above Noise at the Penthouse, Manchester. More here.

YORK: Different Voices: Jaap Blonk

YORK: Different Voices: Jaap Blonk

Date: Monday 11 April, 2016
Time: 7:30 PM
Price: £3.00
Venue address:
York Medical Society Rooms, Stonegate, York YO1 8AW

Publicity material for this event says:

Jaap Blonk (born 1953 in Woerden, Holland) is a self-taught composer, performer and poet. He went to university for mathematics and musicology but did not finish those studies.
In the late 1970s he took up saxophone and started to compose music. A few years later he discovered his potential as a vocal performer, at first in reciting poetry and later on in improvisations and his own compositions.

For almost two decades the voice was his main means for the discovery and development of new sounds.

As a vocalist, Jaap Blonk is unique for his powerful stage presence and almost childlike freedom in improvisation, combined with a keen grasp of structure.

He has performed around the world, on all continents.
This poetry/performance event will concentrate on Jaap Blonk’s performance of the Ursonate by Kurt Schwitters.

Contact:
shandyhall@dsl.pipex.com / 01347 868465

Linda Kemp: a preview

Linda Kemp will perform at the next Other room on Wednesday 13th April, 7 pm start. The other performers will be Stuart Calton, Gary Fisher and Rosanne Robertson. Scroll down for a preview of Stuart and check back here over the next couple of weeks for previews of Gary and Rosanne.

Linda Kemp works with poetry. Publications include Immunological (2014) and Blueprint (2015) and an album, speaking towards (2015) with enjoy your homes press. Recent work can be found in Blackbox Manifold, Datableed, e∙ratio, Gorse, Lighthouse, M58, and Shearsman. As a free improviser her work can be heard as one third of the trio Piggle, one half of the duos soft architecture and Thermal Threshold, with other improvisers and solo. More here.

Honor Gavin // Odie ji Ghast & THF Drenching // soft architecture

Thursday, April 21 at 7:30 PM – 10 PM
Bank Street Arts, 32-40 Bank Street, S1 2DS Sheffield

enjoy your homes press presents an evening of experimental sound.

LIVE::

HONOR GAVIN
“the perfect comeback of the pop star who never was. historical fiction. tears of glitter. feels like heaven”
http://neverneverwas.tumblr.com/

ODIE JI GHAST & THF DRENCHING
“caught in the grid of a decelerated alarm bent down into human hearing” ~ Chocolate Monk
http://thfdrenching.bandcamp.com/album/live-at-tusk

SOFT ARCHITECTURE
“garbled sonic wanderings & electronic confusion” ~ Subruckus Collective
https://soundcloud.com/soft-architecture

An evening of experiment: noise, sound, free improv, whatever it is they’re doing, it’s LIVE. Some might call it music.

Come to Bank Street Arts, grab a drink and listen to some SOUNDS.

Tickets are £2.50 + booking fee in advance / £5 on the door.
https://tickets.partyforthepeople.org/events/1900-honor-gavin-odie-ji-ghast-thf-drenching-soft-architecture

Stuart Calton – a preview

Stuart Calton will perform at the next Other Room on 13th April. For a flavour of his work, listen to Blepharospasms, above with more information about Stuart below and on his own website. The other performers are Gary Fisher, Linda Kemp and Rosanne Robertson. Previews of all three will appear here over the next few weeks.

Bio.: Stuart Calton is a poet based in Manchester.  He is also the musician THF Drenching.  His first few books were published by Barque Press in Brighton.  The best Barque ones are “Three Reveries” (2010) and “The torn instructions for no trebuchet” (2013) which are kind of love poems that deal with clams, Goethe, Amiri Baraka, sex, Melanie Klein, the repetition compulsion and loss.  His latest two books are self-published on own his imprint Drentpaper, part of his record label Council Of Drent. They are “Live At Late Dilated Ileum” (2015), a sequence about hernias, St Lucy of Syracuse, anality, a marmoset and several imaginary pubs, and his latest “Blepharospasms” (2016), which deals with dream interpretation, masochism, masculinity, Henri Rey, reparation, mania and 2Pac becoming a jellyfish.  It also features an ill-tempered stream of abuse directed indiscriminately at all drone music.  ENJOY HIS WORK.

Poetry and Translation

North-West Poetry and Poetics Network, Wednesday April 20th 2016.

POETRY AND TRANSLATION

University of Salford, The Old Fire Station, 1.00 – 3.30 pm.

  • George Szirtes
  • James Byrne
  • Jean Boase-Beier

 

For queries, please contact: Professor Antony Rowland (a.rowland@mmu.ac.uk)

David Miller’s review of Michael N. McGregor’s biography of Robert Lax

David Miller on Michael N McGregor’s new bio of Robert Lax is now up at Stride:

http://stridemagazine.co.uk/Stride%20mag%202016/March2016/Miller.Lax.htm

Rather like his great friend Ad Reinhardt’s late, ‘all-black’ paintings, the poems almost aren’t there, yet very much there, or if you like, very much here. That’s their paradox. And the best of them are extraordinary.

Outside-in/Inside-out

Outside-in / Inside-out

A Symposium / Poetry Festival on Outside and Subterranean Poetry
University of Glasgow, Centre for Contemporary Arts
and Glasgow Women’s Library: 5-7 October 2016
CALL FOR PAPERS

Inspired by the recently published fifth volume of Poems for the Millennium, Barbaric Vast & Wild: A Gathering of Outside & Subterranean Poetry from Origins to Present, this symposium will open up views to poetry past, present, and potentially future with the question: Is there something in poetry ‘outside’ (economically, racially, nationally, formally, etc.) and ‘subterranean’ (suppressed by political and poetic hegemonies) that may lie at the heart of the most vital poetic practice? In their new groundbreaking gathering, Jerome Rothenberg and John Bloomberg-Rissman have assembled a wide range of poems and related language works, in which outside/outsider and subterranean/subversive positions challenge the boundaries of poetry. Poetic form and substance may be rethought from these new perspectives as fundamental and generative; as the editors write: ‘conditions of outsideness may create … a field for the invention of new or special forms and modes of language.’

Outside-in / Inside-out will address the disparate realms of poetry created by, or emerging from, the condition of being outside dominant and official positions. Like Barbaric Vast & Wild, we encourage presentations on moments in the history of outside/subterranean poetry; yet ultimately we will pitch these findings towards contemporary poetry practices. For us, the terms ‘outside’ and ‘subterranean’ must include ideas not only discussed among successful poets and academics solely within a university setting; therefore the symposium will be held in venues with varying access to public audiences and participants, including the University of Glasgow, the Glasgow Centre for Contemporary Arts (CCA), and the Glasgow Women’s Library.  In our symposium, ‘outside’ and ‘subterranean’ also imply modes of formal presentation that may subvert the typical conference format.  If the participant wishes, he or she may replace or modify so-called critical/scholarly work with so-called ‘creative’ or performance work, and vice versa.  In order to generate many approaches to the framework of outsideness, the three-day symposium will include a mix of panel presentations, roundtable discussions, workshops, and (two evenings at the CCA) readings and performances.

We are fortunate to be able to supplement these events with three exhibitions:

1) the history of Concrete poetry as an outside art through the archives of Bob Cobbing and Hansjörg Mayer  2) the Concrete poetry of two Scottish poets, Ian Hamilton Finlay and Edwin Morgan  and 3) ‘The Homeless Library’, a poetry and art collaboration by homeless people in Manchester.

An exciting line-up of poets, researchers, and curators have already confirmed attendance, including among others Charles Bernstein, Sean Bonney, Andrea Brady, Julie Carr, Phillip Davenport, Gerrie Fellows, Bronac Ferran, Alec Finlay, Sara Guyer, Pierre Joris, Tom Leonard, Gerry Loose, Aonghas MacNeacail, Peter Manson, Maggie O’Sullivan, Sandeep Parmar, Holly Pester, Nicole Peyrafitte, and Jerome Rothenberg.

The conference organisers invite proposals for ten to twenty-minute creative and/or scholarly papers and performances. Possible topics for presentations include, but are not limited to:

Problems of defining ‘outside’ in poetry and poetics: What is ‘outside’? What is ‘inside’? Can one become the other? How do ‘outside’ and ‘subterranean’ differ from each other? Are ‘outside’ and ‘subterranean’ useful terms for exploring poetics?    What are the values and risks involved in recuperating ‘outside’ poetry?
Sociological and historical analyses of styles and movements of ‘outside’ poetry or poetry produced from cultural, political and economic marginalization.
Historical instances of ‘outside’ poetry and poetics: A tradition of the outside or subterranean poets, e.g. William Langland, William Blake, John Clare; 18-19th Century women’s poetry; Pre-20th Century working class poetry; The relationship of ‘outside’ or ‘subterranean’ poetry to movements such as Romanticism and Modernism; Barbaric Vast & Wild and the politics of anthologies
The relationship between ‘outside’ poetry and formal experiment and/or experimental art, e.g. Concrete poetry, Text Art, New Media poetries.
Readings of non-poetic material and ephemera as poetry.
The role of archives and distribution in the formation of ‘outside’ and ‘subterranean’ poetry.
Formally and politically subversive gestures of ‘outside’ poetry and poetics: e.g. ‘nomad’ poetics
Poetry which may be considered ‘outside’ or ‘subterranean’ such as:
–    Art brut
–    Women’s work
–    Popular and newspaper poetry
–    Works responding to conditions of deliberate, self-imposed exile
–    Works created out of/responding to outsider-ness due to physical and mental circumstances, disability, race, sexuality, homelessness, economics, class, gender, political stance, etc.
–    Works which dispense with genre boundaries or operate meaningfully across them
–    Works in dialects and ‘nation languages’
–    Ancient prophetic writing
–      Song forms such as ballads, rap, pop

Please send an abstract of up to 300 words by 15th April 2016 to: outsidepoetry@gmail.com <mailto:outsidepoetry@gmail.com>. We will endeavour to respond by 31st May 2016. https://outsidepoetryfestival.wordpress.com/