Tuesdays at Curley's

Welcome to PoemAlley, Stamford, Connecticut's eclectic venue for poets, poetry reading and discussion! Open to anyone living in Fairfield County and the surrounding area, we meet Tuesday nights at 7:30 pm at Curley's Diner on 62 Park Place (behind Target) . Come contribute, get something to eat, or simply listen!



Mar 26, 2013

When Reality Gets Tossed, Like A Salad


Tonight’s featured poet at Curley’s Diner was initially drawn to the form by no less than Frank McCourt (Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Angela’s Ashes), his English teacher while attending New York City’s Stuyvesant High School. Neil Silberblatt began penning his own work while at Cornell University.

In addition to his writing, Neil is very active in organizing Voices of Poetry, a traveling venue for prominent poets and musicians, held at The Sherman Museum, The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum (Ridgefield), the New Britain Museum of American Art and other locations around Connecticut.

Most recently, Neil has placed two pieces in last October’s “It’s Political” issue of the literary publication Verse Wisconsin. So Far, So Good (Lulu), his 2012 collection, is prized by fellow poet and Voices participant, Joan Kantor, for its blend of “… honesty and accessibility” with humor and elegant word-choice.   

Madison Avenue (part of his New York Suite), Grand Prize Winner in the Open Community Poetry Contest sponsored by Hennen's Observer (which also nominated the poet for a Pushcart Prize), conveys with sparse power how standard mandates of self-worth, opportunity and integrity get twisted out of all meaning on the altar of globalized consumerism:


MADISON AVENUE


At the Viand Coffee Shop...

on Madison Avenue
          which must not be confused
          with the Viand on East 86th
          or the Viand on Broadway
come the young ladies fresh from
their visit to the Met
or, if they dare, the Whitney
         because one can only
          take so many Rothkos
          or Van Goghs
          in a morning
wearing their
dazzling tennis whites
which have never seen,
and will never see,
a ground stroke,
as they pick apart their
salads
and each other.

Now enter
the ladies
bearing handbags
with names
like children,
     the real thing
     of course,
     no knock offs here
as they survey the
dieter’s special
and eye the desserts
cordoned off
behind the counter.

Their conversations hushed
as they spread
butter
and gossip.

Two blocks away
from the Viand Coffee Shop
on Madison Avenue
     which must not be confused
     with the Viand on East 86th
     or the Viand on Broadway
stands a refugee
from Senegal
as black as the plum
into which she bites,
its juices dripping
down the side of her hand,
as she quickly sets up
her display of
counterfeit handbags
on the street-corner.
 
She is
real;
the plum is
real;
the bags –
     as she will quietly tell you
     in her rich Senegalese accent,
     with her breath scented by plum -
are beautiful,
but fake.
  
Neil has a second collection of poems, tentatively titled Present Tense, due for release later this year. 

Mar 23, 2013

In Search of Truths, Both Small and Large: Ron Padgett At Greenwich Library This Sunday

Tomorrow’s featured spoken artist of the The Poet’s Voice program began writing and publishing with friends Dick Gallup and Joe Brainard--while still in high school. Despite lasting only five issues, The White Dove Review boasted the work of Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac and other seminal voices of the Beats.

In the years following his relocation in 1960 from Oklahoma to New York, Ron Padgett studied with Kenneth Koch and Lionel Trilling at Columbia College, complemented by a year in Paris under a Fulbright fellowship in French Literature.


Since the 1967 release of Bean Spasms (Granary Books), his first poetry collection co-written with Ted Berrigan (see the interview above about Padgett and his role in helping re-define the New York School of Poetry in the mid-‘60s), Ron Padgett has published numerous collections, including the 2012 Pulitzer Prize finalist How Long (Coffee House Press, 2011), How to Be Perfect (Coffee House Press, 2007), Poems I Guess I Wrote (CUZ Editions, 2001), as well as 1993’s Blood Work (Bamberger Books), a prose collection.














Blaise Cendrars' Complete Poems (University of California Press, 1992) and Pierre Cabanne's Dialogues with Marcel Duchamp (Viking, 1971) are representative of his parallel accomplishments in translation, for which Padgett received numerous grants and awards from such organizations as the National Endowment for the Arts and Columbia University’s Translation Center.

Praised by James Tate for his ability to make his work “sing with absolutely true pitch,” Padgett’s poetry demonstrates a probing commitment to “truths, both small and large,” inspiring “laughter, or at least a thoughtful sigh." In that spirit, here's a jaunty keyboard adaptation of Canadian poet Stuart Ross’ homage, “Ladies and Gentlemen, Mr. Ron Padgett”, performed by UK singer Ben Walker:



A resident of New York City, Padgett edited the comprehensive three-volume World Poets (Scribner, 2000) and was elected Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets in 2008. He also received the Poetry Society of America's Shelley Memorial Award and has placed pieces in The Best American Poetry (Scribner, various editions), Postmodern American Poetry: A Norton Anthology (1994), and The Oxford Book of American Poetry (2006); his work has been translated into fourteen languages.  

Enjoying its 36th year since inception, The Poet's Voice is supported in Greenwich by the Horace E. Manacher Poetry Fund and the Friends of Greenwich Library. The reading is free and all are invited to attend.


Where:
Meeting Room
The Greenwich Library
101 W. Putnam Ave., Greenwich

When:
Sunday, March 24
3 PM

Contact:
Alice Bonvenuto, (203) 622-7919

Mar 21, 2013

Charles Rafferty Featured Tonight At pi-New Haven’s Open Mic

As director of the MFA program at Albertus Magnus College, Sandy Hook resident Charles Rafferty has contributed poetry to The New YorkerDoubletake, the Southern Quarterly and the Connecticut Review. Read the sample below to see why Ian Morris of TriQuarterly regards him a creator of “marvels of certainty and dread, of form and lyric, of--in the words of the poet himself—‘pith and essence’.”

APPETITES
When he gets home she is drinking
from the aquarium, and as she brushes the hair back
to give him her face hello, he swears
he can see the ragged fin of a damselfish
sucked in. What kind of woman is this--
who eats his fish in secret, whose salty kiss
he's starting to understand? There was a time
when he found her pockets full of soil.
Days later he discovered the scoop marks
where her fingers had been in the dirt
of his potted palms. Another time her mouth
had tasted like dimes, and he regretted
the coin collection--the little gods
and Indians that lived underneath his socks.
Suddenly he has an explanation for his missing
keys, the remote control, the photos
in the album removed like words
in a steady redaction of his past.
Could she really have been swallowing his life
while he kissed her hard and paid the bills?
He remembers her penchant for negligees
and dirty stories, the arch of her body
above him. And there it is. His breath held fast
and devoured, without effort or malice,
as if it were the plaything of a woman bored
who hasn't come round to cruelty.

Rafferty will be reading tonight at the Poetry Institute selections from Unleashable Dog, his tenth collection forthcoming from Steel Toe Books. A grant recipient from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Connecticut Commission on Culture & Tourism, Rafferty’s other collections include The Man On the Tower (University of Arkansas Press, 1995), Where the Glories of April Lead (Mitki/Mitki Press, 2001) and A Less Fabulous Infinity (Louisiana Literature Press, 2006). Saturday Night at Magellan's, a short story collection, is due for release from Fomite Press.

Charles Rafferty explains his creative process at the blog How a Poem Happens, here.

An eclectic celebration of the form, the Poetry Institute’s Open Mic Poetry program is hosted by Alice-Anne Harwood, Elizabeth Cleary and Mark McGuire-Schwartz and meets the third Thursday of each month in the warm setting of the New Haven-based Young Men’s Institute Library reading room on the second floor, beginning at 7:00 pm (please arrive early to sign up to read). Refreshments are served. 




For more information, contact pi-New Haven at:

The Institute Library
847 Chapel Street
New Haven, CT

Mar 14, 2013

When The Caged Fire Talks, Does It Cage Us?


In contrast to the prehistoric discovery of fire as a tool for the creation of leisure time and the opportunity to build culture, contemporary television turns the tables by adapting us to someone else’s idea of what culture is supposed to be. Franklin Street Works’ latest media exhibit, Your Content Will Return Shortly, dissects this seductive and ubiquitous tie between viewer and TV from the perspectives of commerce, technological perception and development, as well as the overall psychological sculpting of society.

“This show was inspired by a desire to connect my own research on historic video exhibitions and readings in media theory—including texts by David Joselit and Marshall McLuhan,” explains Terri C. Smith, the exhibition’s curator, “with observations of our own contemporary relationships with ‘television,’ which for many is streamed at will via a laptop, bypassing the TV set altogether.”

Preceding the 5:30-7 pm artists’ tour and café discussion this evening with Siebren Versteeg and Jeff Ostergrem (both of Brooklyn) and New Haven-based Catherine Ross, Franklin Street Works has arranged with the University of Connecticut to present its second ekphrastic poetry reading beginning at noon, courtesy of Pamela Brown and students from her UConn writing class, whom, as post-VHS/CRT-era  adopters of the latest iteration of technology, like live streaming video, iphones and Blueray DVDs, will offer generation-specific interpretations of the works on display.

Catherine Ross, IFO, 2006, video still, courtesy the artist
Among the eleven artists participating in Your Content, Jeff Ostergren contributed Stimulus,  a timely two-channel video display that uses the details of pharmaceutical ads to demonstrate how, with sirenic finesse, TV delivers viewers to advertisers as a captive audience, while pretending to primarily serve their entertainment and information needs. Sports coverage and sitcoms aside, “commercials ARE the content,” Jeff reminds, as “the programming they surround are sublimated by the lurking capital that funds them, that relates to the content that is geared towards a… focus group-determined viewer.”

Emily Roz, Presidents, 2006, 20 Polaroid prints, courtesy the artist


How TV gets us to compartmentalize elements of current events and fiction with equal rigidity is demonstrated in Emily Roz’s Death by Mel, wherein Polaroid photos of TV images from various films featuring Gibson in the role of a killer are displayed side-by-side, removed from their individual contexts. A complementary sequence of cinematic presidents drives the point home with disturbing impact that, despite the fact most viewers would have more familiarity in their lives with the latter encounter (as mediated via TV news) than the former, the vital distinction between the entertainment industry's interpretation of 'real-life', as opposed to 'realistic' no longer matters: Each piece “brings to mind an entire genre… and (encourages viewers to) accept certain pretexts without question.”
Made possible in part through the support of the Community Arts Partnership Program awarded to Franklin Street Works by the City of Stamford and a two-year grant from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Your Content Will Return Shortly opened on January 24 and is on display through Sunday, March 24. In addition to Jeff Ostergren’s and Emily Roz’s pieces, the program features the work of Christopher DeLaurenti, Eric Gottesman, Jonathan Horowitz, Sophy Naess, Lucy Raven, Martha Rosler, Catherine Ross, Carmelle Safdie, and Siebren Versteeg.

Situated in an old row house near the UConn campus, Franklin Street Works is less than one hour from New York City via Metro North and about one mile (a 15 minute walk) from the Stamford train station. On-street parking is available on Franklin Street (metered until 6 pm except on Sunday), and paid parking is available nearby in a lot on Franklin Street and in the Summer Street Garage (100 Summer Street), behind Target.


When:
Thursday, March 14, 2013
Noon-1:15 PM, UConn Poetry Reading
5:30-7 PM, Artists’ Walk-Through & Café Discussion

Where:
Franklin Street Works
41 Franklin Street
Stamford, CT 06901

Phone/e-mail:
203-595-5211


___

Additional Information:

Douglas Coupland, Marshall McLuhan: You Know Nothing of My Work!, Atlas (2010)

David Joselit, Feedback: Television Against Democracy, The MIT Press (2010)

Marshall McLuhan, Quentin Fiore & Shepard Fairey, The Medium is the Massage: An Inventory of Effects, Gingko Press (2005)

Marshall McLuhan & Lewis P. Lapham, Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man, The MIT Press (1994)

Michael Parenti, Make-Believe Media: the Politics of Entertainment, St. Martin's Press (1992)


Mar 11, 2013

(Silent?) Spring 'Round The Corner

The turmoil of Hurricane Sandy, floods, drought and the inconsistent severity of recent winter storms add a layer of near-frantic anticipation to the annual ritual of turning our clocks forward an hour and its comforting auguring of seasonal transition--while it still remains relatively reliable.

With that sentiment in mind, as it might apply to rebounding Nature, individual opportunity, or engagement in building a more honestly convivial future for one another and the lattice of viability of which we are a part, all are encouraged to share in, or just support, tonight's reading of poetry in celebration of springtime renewal, or whatever is uppermost in readers' minds.


Hosted by Frank Chambers and PoemAlley's Nick Miele, the Barnes & Noble's Open Mic Poetry program meets the second Monday of each month in the cookbook section on the main floor of the bookstore (located in the Stamford Down Center), beginning at 7:15 p.m.

Below, see how near-reckless commitment, hazardous ice spelunking and majesterial arctic vistas make the documentary Chasing Ice a humbling testimony to the engines of macro-scale seasonal change:




For more information, contact:

Barnes & Noble
100 Greyrock Place Suite H009
Stamford, CT 06901

203-323-1248