A NIGHT OF PSYCHEDELIC NOIR

To celebrate the end of Again, A Time Machine: Stewart Home, SPACE and Book Works invite you to A Night of Psychedelic Noir.

A closing performance, screening and party, with Stewart Home, Katrina Palmer and Bridget Penney at SPACE, London, on 20 May, from 6.30-late, and the launch of a new limited edition print by Stewart Home.

DOORS OPEN – 6.30PM

READINGS – 7.00–8.00PM

SCREENINGS, MUSIC AND FOOD – 8.00–LATE

FREE ENTRY

Stewart Home’s selective archive closes with a night of readings and performance, from Semina artists and writers, Katrina Palmer, author of The Dark Object, and Bridget Penney, author of Index, along with Stewart Home, reading from Blood Rites of the Bourgeoisie, Defiant Pose, Memphis Underground and Down and Out in Shoreditch and London.

The event and exhibition closes with a barbeque and party, screenings of cult kung-fu films Master of the Flying Guillotine and Scorpion Thunderbolt, and the sounds of northern soul.

Maintenant #93 – Charles Simic

What more can be asked of a poet than that they maintain their own sense of integrity towards what they deem poetic? It follows then if the poet who does maintain a writing life of such commitment is a thinker of originality and insight, and that they maintain this commitment across a lifetime, then their work will have a life far beyond them. All the more if they do so with an affability that belies their skill, and a determination that proves them to be enduring. For a lifetime of writing, Charles Simic has been one of world’s most engaging and singular poets. He has exerted such an influence over so many and for so long, he has almost come to define an era. His voice is sure, utterly recognisable, both profound and humble, both grounded and flighted, both incisive and witty and he has straddled labels and definitions, as he has the continents of North America and Europe. Never has his own work been occluded by his translations but his lifetime of service to European poetry has fundamentally shaped the perception of Serbian, and Balkan, poetry in the English speaking world at large. He is an immense presence in US poetry and inarguably one of the most important poets of the late 20th century. For edition 93 of the Maintenant series, Charles Simic.

http://www.3ammagazine.com/3am/maintenant-93-charles-simic/

To accompany the interview is a poem, never before published, ‘Ghost Cinema’

http://www.3ammagazine.com/3am/ghost-cinema/

Re-Word – mostly from the mainland

Performances of poetry and drama in translation, together with other local and European poets and translators.

Tuesday 22 May, 7.30-9.30 pm, Lloyds Upstairs, Lloyds Hotel, 617 Wilbraham Road, Chorlton, Manchester.

Provisional programme:

Issa haiku (Japanese) – Wilhelm Wetterhoff

Four contemporary Romanian poets – Daniel Puia-Dumitrescu (with Judy Kendall)

Poetry in Polish – Scott Thurston

Anna Szabo poems (Hungarian) – Szilvi Naray-Davey (with Judy Kendall)

INTERVAL 8.15-8.40

Hungarian drama – Szilvi Naray-Davey (with Judy Kendall)

Poetry in German – Daniele Pantano

Walloon poems from ‘A Translated Man’ (Belgian poet Rene Van Valckenborch) – Robert Sheppard

Contemporary English haiku and tanka by Sheila Butterworth, Martin Lucas, Stuart Quine, Fred Schofield, Ian Storr translated into Swedish, Finnish and Romanian – Daniel P-D, Wilhelm W, Martin Lucas/Judy Kendall

Chris McCabe: The Restructure

“THE RESTRUCTURE tells the story, through a series of poems, of the circumstances leading to the conception of a boy and his delivery into a difficult world. Born with a condition that requires long stretches in hospital the author attempts to view the world through the senses of the boy who is yet to learn language. This play of words presents the challenges of the world in a new light. The backdrop of the book is social unrest, but the author and boy – who has 40 different pseudonyms – push back against the monotone order of THE RESTRUCTURE (the all-controlling voice that appears throughout as a public service announcement) through the surreal inventions of words and games. This is a gripping book of contrasts, conjuring a life of extreme polarities that is always striving for a resolution, towards a restructured world.”

Out now from Salt Publishing.

Contemporary Poetry and Source Conference

18th May 2012 – 20th May 2012 at Plymouth University.

“This conference aims to explore the use of source material in contemporary poetry. The term ‘source’ should be given a wide remit, incorporating ‘origin’, ‘subject’ and ‘method’. Contemporary poetry, here, refers to writers working post – 1950, but of course thier sources may well be historical. We invite single author studies as well as papers which speak to the sources which are defining our poetic zeitgeist; we also invite creative practitioners to explore their own sources with a framework or context. Some topics for panels include: visual arts, music, nature, the personal, the impersonal, found material, the documentary, the trans-Atlantic exchange, influence, language, literature, biography, history, politics, philosophy and translations. Papers on or inspired by the work of our plenary speakers are very welcome.”

Includes a paper by Mark Leahy on Opposable Dumbs by Other Room reader Tina Darragh. You can watch part one of Tina’s reading below and find the other parts here.

Shearsman Reading: Laurie Duggan & Paul A. Green

Laurie Duggan & Paul A. Green will be officially launching their new Shearsman titles: The Pursuit of Happiness and The Gestaltbunker, respectively. Also being launched on the evening is The Complete Poems of César Vallejo, translated by Michael Smith & Valentino Gianuzzi. There will be a short reading by Valentino Gianuzzi and Tony Frazer from the volume. Click on the covers for more information.

The reading venue is:
Swedenborg Hall
Swedenborg House
20/21 Bloomsbury Way
London WC1A 2TH

Admission free.

The entrance is around the corner on Barter Street. Closest Tube Stations: Holborn (Central & Piccadilly Lines : 4 mins’ walk), Tottenham Court Road (Central & Northern Lines: 6 mins), Covent Garden (Piccadilly Line: 10 mins). Several buses stop a few yards from the Hall. There is an underground carpark close by, beneath Bloomsbury Square. Disabled access is available, but please let us know in advance if it should be required.

Further details here of the venue:

http://www.shearsman.com/pages/editorial/readings.html

 

Poems For Many Voices

Thursday 7 June, 1.00-2.00pm

St Michael at the North Gate , Cornmarket, central OXFORD

Join Oxford poet Paula Claire in a communal performance of poems by Gerard Manley Hopkins, Bob Cobbing and herself that she has arranged for groups of interactive voices, part of her Dreaming Spires Online initiative. Free admission, family friendly.

This is part of OXFRINGE 2012

Tony Lopez: Sounds New Poetry Festival

Recent Other Room reader Tony Lopez is reading with Steve Collis at this year’s Sounds New Poetry Festival in Canterbury. Details below:

Wednesday 9th May 6pm, Peter Brown Room, Darwin College, University of Kent.
Reading: Found Text

Working with the idea of the found text, Steve Collis and Tony Lopez present poems that explore borrowing and appropriation in art. Like John Tavener in The Veil of the Temple, Collis and Lopez work with and through mixed sources to open the possibilities of collective expression.

New books from Reality Street

Paul Brown: A CABIN IN THE MOUNTAINS
Poet, editor, publisher and translator Paul Brown has been absent from the poetry scene for some years. This complete collection of his poetry  from the 1980s, the lost third of a trilogy (the first two books were Meetings & Pursuits (1978) and Masker (1982)), is long overdue.
For more information and to buy, click here.
May 2012, 978-1-874400-56-1, 108pp, price £9

Maggie O’Sullivan: WATERFALLS
At last the paperback version of a book only previously available as a limited edition from Etruscan Books. Five visually rich text sequences originally dating from the 1990s.
For more information and to buy, click here.
May 2012, 978-1-874400-57-8, 82pp, price £9

The Future of Poetry: UCL – French Embassy

9 May 2012, 6pm, followed by reception.
Gustave Tuck Lecture Theatre, UCL Main Building, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT.

The massive growth in creative writing courses in recent years has meant that there are probably more practicing poets at work now than ever before. Yet the position of poetry in relation to the public sphere at large seems to grow increasingly opaque. Is poetry merely a minority leisure activity, or can it still claim to be, as it was for Milton and Wordsworth, a means of understanding the world unrivalled both in its scope and its complexity? With so many new media changing the ways in which we produce and consume texts of all kinds, what is the future of poetry?

Participants include Other Room reader Keston Sutherland. More at the UCL site.