Nov 30, 2019

NEW TIME: Ekphrastic Poets Give Voice To Social Erasure This Sunday At Close Of Franklin Street Works' "Otherwise Obscured" Exhibit

PoemAlley and other members of the area poetry community are invited this coming Sunday to a poetry salon hosted by Franklin Street Works of Stamford, featuring (above, left to right) three culturally-diverse poets, Sara Elkamel, Jan-Henry Gray, and Malcolm Tariq, who dissect normatively-imposed concepts of distortion and invisibility in relation to nationality, ethnicity and gender identity as part of their creative practice.

The free reading, beginning at 3:15 pm, is partially sponsored through the Stamford Arts & Culture Community Arts Partnership Program and complements FSW’s current exhibit, Otherwise Obscured: Erasure in Body and Text, which will end its run on January 26 with a closing party, offering a complementary wine/champagne reception and a final tour conducted by program curator Danilo Machado (right), who selected the three poets for their alignment with the themes of the program.

Based in New York City and her hometown Cairo, Sara has facilitated various writing workshops in Alexandria, Amman, Wadi Rum and other cities in Egypt and Jordan, addressing the relationship between text and the body, memory and language, the notion and physicality of pilgrimage and other topics central to her work. She holds an MA in arts journalism from Columbia University and is currently pursuing an MFA in poetry at New York University. Her writing has appeared as part of the Halal If You Here Me anthology edited by Fatimah Asghar and Safia Elhillo (Haymarket Books, 2019), as well as in The Rumpus, American Chordata, Winter Tangerine and other literary journals.

A Kundiman fellow also involved in numerous writing and poetry workshops, Philippine-born Jan-Henry Gray was raised in California, and worked as a chef in San Francisco for more than 12 years. Living undocumented in the United States for more than three decades, Jan-Henry graduated from SFU and the Columbia College Chicago’s MFA program; he earned the inaugural Undocupoets Fellowship and awards from the Jack Kent Cooke Foundation and the Academy of American
Poets.

Jan-Henry's first book, Documents, was selected as the winner of the BOA Editions Poulin Poetry Prize in 2018. In addition to releasing a chapbook, selected emails through speCt! Books, he has placed pieces in several publications, from Chris Soto's Nepantla: An Anthology for Queer Poets of Color (Nightboat Books, 2018) and the Colorado Review, The Margins, Quarterly West and Puerto del Sol.

Malcolm Tariq’s
Heed the Hollow: Poems (Graywolf Press, 2019) won the Cave Canem Prize, while 2017’s Extended Play received the Gertrude Press Poetry Chapbook Contest for that year. A native of Savannah, Georgia, Malcolm’s poetry explores the invisibility and vulnerability of “the bottom” as it applies to blackness and sexuality against the backdrop of the American South. Malcolm holds a PhD in English from the University of Michigan. 





A not-for-profit contemporary art space located in downtown Stamford, Franklin Street Works has worked with more than 300 internationally exhibiting artists, curated 34 original exhibitions, and has received two Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts grants and three Fairfield County's Community Foundation grants. FSW exhibitions have also received positive reviews and features in ArtCritical, Art in America online, Art New England, Modern Painters and other major art publications. Find out more at http://www.franklinstreetworks.org.






When:


3-6 pm


Sunday, January 26, 2019





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

Contact:
Terri C Smith
Creative Director


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