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!



Showing posts with label Medrano. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Medrano. Show all posts

Apr 18, 2017

J. Barrett Wolf: Caviar For The Mind


On Dad's scooter, 1958 Freeport, NY
This evening’s featured reader has traveled, performed or conducted workshops over the last quarter-century in locales as diverse as The Limestone Dusty Poetry Festival in Hunstville, Alabama and the pubs on the Scottish isle of Arran. 


In Dublin he also studied with Eavan Boland and Theo Dorgan at the Irish Writer's Center and found the opportunity to merge his enthusiasm for poetry with motorcycling in Cape Cod, where he began touring and performing each August as part of the Highway Poets Motorcycle Club, operated by the International Association of Published Bikers (find out more about this dual fascination in Jose JoeGo Gouveia, Rubber Rubber Side Down: The Biker Poet Anthology, published by Archer Books in 2008 to which Wolf contributed and in this profile from 2016). 

Wolf’s own collection, Stark Raving Calm appeared in 2011 through Boone’s Dock Press and was followed by the e-book collection, The Moon is Always In Transit (Amazon Kindle, 2012).
When he moved to Stamford in the 1990s, Wolf worked at the Ferguson Library and was elected president of the Loft Artists’ Association in his first year. In 1994, he was one of just eight poets for a coveted slot on the Connecticut Commission on the Arts 'Touring Artist' roster and, as a resident, performed regularly as half of the bilingual, English/Spanish poetry duo "Café con Leche" with PA’s own noted Dominican poet/poetry therapist Marianela Medrano. You can find selected poems in both English and Spanish at his homepagejbarrettwolf.com, divided into the categories of Place, Romance and the Road. 

The only artist to receive a United Cultural Fund (UCF) grant in 2012 by the Broome County Arts Council of Binghamton, New York, Wolf used it to  produce the reading series “Here & There: Poets from Near and Far”, a five-reading series pairing area poets with counterparts from the greater Northeastern United States, including, locally, Jessica Dubey, Joe Weil and Nicole Santalucia and, among those representing the Northeast, Adeke Rose, Ryk McIntyre and Sean Thomas Dougherty of Batlimore, Maryland, Providence, Rhode Island and Erie, Pennsylvania, respectively. 

While Wolf's poetry has been described by one peer as “caviar for the mind”, its live delivery by the writer is just as rich and involving. His reading of "Courting the Librarian" features pointed gestures, expressive eyebrow movement and inviting, 180-degree audience contact:


J. Barrett Wolf currently lives and writes in Binghamton in his home state of New York, where he ha hosted the poetry open mic program at the now-defunct RiverRead Books, a local independent bookstore, for close to six years.

Jul 26, 2013

The Mirror Crack’d (By A Spear): Sex, Love & War At The Unitarian Universalist Society

This Sunday, PoemAlley and participants from the regional poetry community share their thoughts on gender relations, inequality and related topics clustering about that all-too ubiquitous (yet fatalistically under-examined) institution of organized mass violence, which has become the roaring hearth of American society over the last twelve years.

Part of the Unitarian Universalist Society in Stamford’s series of lay-led summer services, "Sex, Love & War" will be hosted by Ralph Nazareth and feature readings from himself and fourteen other poets, including Robin Kurtz, Lisa Labazzo,  Bob Sanders and Ronna Schenkerman, with guest readings by Neil Silberblatt (organizer of the popular state-wide Voices of Poetry series), Middlebury-based poetry therapist Marianela Medrano and Jane Wickham.

In sympathy with the issues raised by such cases as Lynddie England's haunting, romantically-entangled stint at Abu Ghraib, as well as the more recent focus on the prevalence of rape and sexual assault in the military, this Sunday’s presentation will use a combination of music, words and video, both during and in the UU Social Room afterwards, to suggest how war distorts love and loyalty and how sex and masculine identity are mis-defined to validate endless armed conflict as normative.





While the 2012 documentary, The Invisible War (see trailer below under "Additional Information")  is laudable for campaigning against widespread sexual abuse within the American armed services, the question lingers as to how realistic it is to implement reform without first acknowledging such conduct as a byproduct of a belligerent foreign policy and the overtones of martial authoritarianism and privilege that permeate domestic entertainment, sports and culture--ranging from interrogation via sexual degradation at Guantanamo, the rape of an unconscious teen by Steubenville High football team members, jingoistic films (click here for a recent critique of Zero Dark Thirty), the "doing the Lynndie" photo craze following the aformentioned England 2004 scandal, not to mention the misogynistic half-time mascot theatrics seen in college and professional sports:



On the hopeful side, if the supposedly universal allure of conflict and power seem a timeless head-scratcher rooted inviolably in our nature or genes, maybe it only seems that way due to a lack of honesty to investigate its origins, because the toddlers from this 2010 Yale study of innate empathy sure don’t have trouble defying it:



Where:
Unitarian Universalist Society in Stamford
20 Forest Street (right across from the Avon Theatre)

When:
10 AM, Sunday, July 28, 2013

Contact:
203-348-0708/www.uusis.org



____
Additional Information:

War and Sex: ABrief History of Men's Urge for Battle
John V. H. Dippel
Prometheus Books, 2010

The New Press, 2011

Steven Pinker
Viking Adult, 2011

Invisible War (2012) trailer:




Apr 6, 2013

Moving Art In The Morning, Spoken Art In The Afternoon


Two complementary programs infuse tomorrow with visual and spoken delight, personal and social depth beginning at 11 AM with CiCi Artist’s “Moving Pictures, animated art shorts”, a free presentation of the Avon Theatre Film Centre, Stamford’s non-profit, member-supported movie house on Bedford Street.

CiCi Artist












As the 30-second exercise below from www.ciciartist.com generously affirms, CiCi has a particular fascination with melding graphic art with video and the animation format, distilled into a one-hour collection of assorted subjects, including Spreading Mom, a collaboration with PoemAlley’s Bill Buschel (who wrote the screenplay), inspired by the artist and her family’s unforgettable four-year effort to fulfill their mother’s final wish to have her ashes spread in Florence, Italy. The visuals are enhanced by an original score by Linda Allen and Mick Leonard (you can access their music at www.DBUproductions.com.



When:
Sunday, April 7, 11 AM


Where:
Avon Theatre Film Centre 
272 Bedford Street
Stamford, CT

Contact:
(203) 967-3660
Avon Theatre Film Centre


Lisa C. Taylor
In the afternoon, head to The Shelton Playhouse to enjoy readings delivered by Lisa C. Taylor, Ralph Nazareth, Marianela Medrano, Elizabeth Thomas and others at Voices of Poetry, organized by Pushcart Award-nominee Neil Silberblatt (guest speaker at Curley’s last Tuesday).

Committed to using poetry as a tool to slow down the pace of modern life, Lisa C. Taylor shares her thoughts, information on creativity workshops and her work, such as material from her new Syracuse University Press compilation, Necessary Silence, at www.lisactaylor.com. Lisa reveals “What Slugs Have to Teach Us” below:


Read poet and arts educator Elizabeth Thomas’ touching musings on family elder care at “Elizabeth’s Blog” at http://hereisakiss.wordpress.com. Below is a live reading from her collection From the Front of the Classroom (Antrim House, 2008):


Accompanying the poetry will be live music courtesy of guitarist Mike Latini. His homepage (www.reverbnation.com/mikelatini) features audio files of several of his solo compositions. Below is a 2012 live performance by Latini and Nowan of “Only a Dream” at The Towne Crier Cafe in Pawling, NY; Mike, who wrote the lyrics and music, is on the right:  



When:
Sunday, April 7, 2-4 PM


Where:
The Sherman Playhouse
5 Route 39 North
Sherman, CT

Contact:
(860) 354-3622
The Sherman Playhouse