2024 Annual Chapbook Reading at The Center For Book Arts
Nov
21

2024 Annual Chapbook Reading at The Center For Book Arts

Dear Friends, 

As some of you may have heard, my poetry manuscript, Get Lost Colonizer: Erasures From the Future, was selected among the top three for The Center For Book Art’s 2024 Annual Chapbook Contest. Over 500 manuscripts were submitted! 

Please join me this week for an event celebrating us, CFBA, and the artists who designed our books and/or our broadsides. If you are interested in ordering the beautiful broadside Tash Nikol designed for my poem 10 Truths and a Lie, please see here

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2024 Annual Chapbook Reading at The Center For Book Arts

THURS, NOVEMBER 21 | 6:00–8:00PM | RSVP here

28 West 27th St, 3rd Floor, New York, NY 10001

Phone: 212-481-0295

Please join us for a poetry reading and publication launch celebrating our 2024 Chapbook Competition winner, nar juicebox castle, and runners-up, Stephanie Dinsae and Irene Villaseñor! The event will be hosted by the competition’s Guest Judge, Rasha Abdulhadi. We will also hear from the artists who designed, printed, and assembled this year’s publications: Rhonda Khalifeh and Jenna Hamed; Sidney Renaud-Eberly; Audra Woloweic; and Tash Nikol.

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Santa Fe Art Institute - November Open Studios
Nov
13

Santa Fe Art Institute - November Open Studios

Please join us for our (@santafeartinstitute) upcoming open studios! Hear / see literary and visual works, mingle with artists, and enjoy some refreshments. Wednesday, November 13th at 6:30pm!

Featuring programming and works by: Carmen Selam, Quynh Lam, Yi-Hsuan Li, Salome Jaffe, Varuni Kanagasundaram, Jake Warren, Irene Villaseñor, Ayangbe Mannen, Jamal Ademola, and Perri Lynch Howard.

@a95121
@quynh.lam.studio
@irenesenor
@jacobkevin.sf
@salome_ali_mccaskill_jaffe
https://www.varunik.com/
@yakamanche

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Santa Fe Art Institute - October Open Studios
Oct
9

Santa Fe Art Institute - October Open Studios

Please join us for our (@santafeartinstitute) upcoming open studios! Hear / see literary and visual works, mingle with artists, and enjoy some refreshments. Wednesday, October 9th at 5:30pm!

Featuring programming and works by: Carmen Selam, Yi-Hsuan Li, Salome Jaffe, Varuni Kanagasundaram, Jake Warren, Amy Jenkins, Felicia Honkasalo, and Irene Villaseñor.

@a95121
@amy_jenkins_artist
@feliciahonkasalo
@jacobkevin.sf
@salome_ali_mccaskill_jaffe
https://www.varunik.com/
@yakamanche

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Rainbow Book Fair — Come Hear! Poetry Marathon
Apr
20

Rainbow Book Fair — Come Hear! Poetry Marathon

  • NYC Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Hey everyone, I'll be reading some of my work at the Rainbow Book Fair tomorrow (04/20)! I'm scheduled to read around 2:50pm. I'll also bring some books and literary journals containing my work to sell.

LGBT Community Center: 208 W 13th St, New York, NY 10011

Room 410: Pat Parker Vito Russo Library

Subways: A/C/E or 1/2/3 to 14th Street

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Sheepshead Review (Online) — Launch Party
Dec
13

Sheepshead Review (Online) — Launch Party

My poem (Escape from Small Towns) appears in Sheepshead Review, A Journal of Art & Literature at University of Wisconsin - Green Bay.

It was partly inspired by the experiences of growing up in a safe house for undocumented migrant kin from Mexico, Central America, and South America.

Sheepshead Review is published in print each late Fall and Spring by students of the Sheepshead Review Student Organization, as well as the class, English 324. They publish new, emerging, and established artists and writers from all over the world.

The Launch Party takes place on December 13 at 1:00 pm CST (North American Central Time Zone).

Link to RSVP:

https://uwgreenbay.ca1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_0lxiXKJDRb3G04u

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decomp journal (Online)  — Launch Party
Mar
4

decomp journal (Online) — Launch Party

Please join us tomorrow (March 04, 2023 from 4pm -5:30pm PST) for the online (zoom) celebration of Issue 06 of decomp journal: REFUGEE FUTURITIES: Speculating through Displaced (After)Lives edited by Elaina Nguyen, amanda wan, Ben Connor, Olivia Lim, Ipek Omercikli, and Jane Willsie

All times listed are in Pacific Standard Time. NYC is 3 hours ahead.

I'll be reading in the section that starts at 4:50pm PST / 7:50pm EST.

RSVP at
http://tinyurl.com/decomplaunch

Read Issue 06 at
https://decompjournal.com/issues

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Cave Canem (Online) — Class Reading: Writing Personas with Fred D’Aguiar
Jun
22

Cave Canem (Online) — Class Reading: Writing Personas with Fred D’Aguiar

Class Description: Writing Personas with Fred D’Aguiar (virtual workshop)

We write as readers and listeners; we read as writers, as doers and those done, as watchers and seekers, and a combination of all of these. Let’s cultivate our writing persona(s). Let’s be makers and movers. Participants in this workshop will read/hear exemplars of poetic form, talk about them, and write a poem each week. The format entails reading and commenting on each other’s work, to promote revision for a final portfolio of ten poems that may be written &/or spoken &/or recorded (with or without music) by each participant. We will kick off each session with a poem, drawn from history or more recent examples, before we launch into reading and discussion.

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Gratitude and Recognition Run & Documentary with Panel Discussion Honoring Indigenous Nations
Nov
28

Gratitude and Recognition Run & Documentary with Panel Discussion Honoring Indigenous Nations

Gratitude and Recognition Run & Documentary with Panel Discussion Honoring Indigenous Nations

I won't be joining the 5K run today (10am meet-up spot @overthrownewyork - 9 Bleecker Street in NYC) But later (7pm - 9pm EST) I'll be one of the zoom panelists for this event. I'm joining Ana Lakotajewel (@lakotajewel) and Chase Iron Eyes (@chaseironeyes). @gatherfilm will be screened. Tickets also found here.

@gatherfilm "is an intimate portrait of the growing movement amongst Native Americans to reclaim their spiritual, political and cultural identities through food sovereignty, while battling the trauma of centuries of genocide. Gather follows Nephi Craig, a chef from the White Mountain Apache Nation (Arizona), opening an indigenous café as a nutritional recovery clinic; Elsie Dubray, a young scientist from the Cheyenne River Sioux Nation (South Dakota), conducting landmark studies on bison; and the Ancestral Guard, a group of environmental activists from the Yurok Nation (Northern California), trying to save the Klamath river."

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Big Fun: Indigenous Art & Performance as Resistance
Jan
28

Big Fun: Indigenous Art & Performance as Resistance

Join us for an evening of poetry, music, and art celebrating radical urban Indigenous resistance, resilience, and activism. Big Fun takes its name and shape from the title of a poem by Diane Burns (Anishinaabe/Chemehuevi), published in her 1981 chapbook, Riding the One-Eyed Ford (Contact II Publications). Connecting back and looking forward through the lens of Burns’ life and work as a poet and performer on what is now called The Lower East Side, this interdisciplinary evening will feature a series of performances by members of the Indigenous Kinship Collective as well as by other Indigenous folx who currently occupy and make their lives and work on the homelands of the Lenape, Lenapehoking.

Performers and participants include:Tatiana BenallyRosa Bordallo, Jolene Chee (Cheef Culture), Korina Emmerich (EMME), Lou Cornum, Irene VillaseñorRegan de LoggansStina Hamlin, Laura OrtmanRoxy Romero, and Irene Villaseñor.

We are thrilled to announce that we will be joined by a very special guest, Diane Burns' daughter, Britta Ninshonz Burns Ruona.

Curated by poet Nicole Wallace, this event accompanies our exhibition, Urban Indian: Native New York Now.

About the Performers and Participants:
Tatiana Benally is an interdisciplinary artist from Diné Bikeyah (Navajo Nation). Benally primarily uses the mediums of choreography, beatmaking, and DJ-ing, but has past work in animation and essay film. Their work focuses of feeling native ennui within capitalism, and the joys of being among native communities.  Please reach out for collaboration if you are ndn and into sound or film.

Rosa Bordallo is a singer-songwriter and a Chamoru bron and raised in her native island of Guam in Micronesia. She came to New York in 2002 to study film and quickly immersed herself in the city’s vibrant live music scene. She co-write and recorded three albums with the post-punk band, cholo, and released three solo Eps under the alias Manett. Her first full-length album REEF WALKER is out now on Time Castle.

Jolene Chee is Diné from Tł’ízí Łání clan, born for the Tódích’íi’nii clan. Her maternal grandfather is chíshí clan and paternal grandfather is Tsénjíkíní clan. She grew up in the canyons of Piñon, Arizona on Diné Bikéyah (Navajo Reservation) and is currently based in Lenapehoking (Brooklyn, NYC). Connecting, creating energy and holding space with Indigenous relatives on stolen land is important to her. She is a fashion designer/stylist who advocates for environmental sustainability and against cultural appropriation. 

Lou Cornum is a two spirit Diné dyke born in Arizona. They are currently a PhD candidate in English at the CUNY Graduate Center and a member of the editorial collectives for LIES, The New Inquiry, and Pinko, a magazine of gay communism. 

Korina Emmerich has built her brand on the backbone of Expression, Art, and Culture, leading the charge to embrace art and design as one and weaving it into her brand story.  Her colorful work is known to reflect her Indigenous heritage stemming from The Coast Salish Territory, Puyallup tribe. With a strong focus in social justice and responsibility, Emmerich has developed her brand in Brooklyn and cultivated a loyal following and successful path as a truly unique contemporary fashion designer and artist.

Stina Hamlin, Director of Post Production at East Coast Digital, is an award-winning VR creator and television producer. Being of Cherokee and Choctaw descent, her focus is on projects that amplify Indigenous voices. Currently she is working on XR project Blood Memory: The Experience, and Red House Series, a multi-platform project. @stinahamlin.

Regan de Loggans (Mississippi Choctaw/ Ki’Che Maya) is a two-spirit multidisciplinary activist, art historian, curator, and educator based in Brooklyn on Lenape land. Their work relates to decolonizing, indigenizing, and queering institutions and curatorial practices. Regan works with a number of museums and universities throughout the occupied United States, teaching Native social history and decolonial theory. They were awarded the 2019 R.I.S.E. Poetry fellowship for their published works in chahta anumpa, and are also one of the founding members of the Indigenous Kinship Collective. They have staged actions at The Whitney Biennial, American Museum of Natural History, and on the MTA Subway in response to continued settler colonialism and institutionalized racism and violence. Pronouns: they/themme. Instagram: @PhaggotPlanet

From the rosined-out beast of White Mountain Apache musician Laura Ortman’s tough stained violin emerges deranged crumpled wings twirling in starlight and oil slickness and shininess; bearing heavy use of amplification and effects, she also incorporates over-rosining to add smoke, dust, wind and slow-motion grittiness in her scored / improvised compositions for amplified violin, Apache violin, whistles, tree branches, slides, guitar picks, bells and tuning fork. 

Britta Ruona, the daughter of Diane Burns, is a native New Yorker and of Anishinabe and Chemehuevi tribes. Growing up in NYC's Lower East Side, Ruona has been in the poetry and art community since she could walk. She grew up in art community safe havens such as A Gathering of the Tribes and The Nuyorican Poets Cafe. Now, she is a professional make-up artist who has worked on numerous celebrity clients and participated in New York Fashion Week.

Irene Villaseñor (Ifugao, Aeta, and Purépecha) received the Catalog for Giving’s Urban Hero Award, the Astraea Lesbian Foundation for Justice’s Women We Love, Women We Honor Award, and was part of the team at American Documentary | P.O.V. that received a MacArthur Award for Creative and Effective Institutions. She currently serves on advisory boards for the Chinese American Planning Council and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. 

Nicole Wallace is the author of WAASAMOWIN (October 2019) and was a 2019 Poets House Emerging Poets Fellow. She is the Managing Director of The Poetry Project and a member of the Indigenous Kinship Collective. Recent work can be read in print in Survivance: Indigenous Poesis Vol. IV Zine and online at A Gathering of The Tribes, LitHub, and A Perfect Vacuum. Originally from Gakaabikaang, located in what is currently called Minnesota, she is of settler/European ancestry and a descendent of the Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa (Ojibwe).

About Diane Burns:
Diane Burns (1957 – 2006) was born in Kansas to a Chemehuevi father and Anishinaabe mother. She grew up in California, Wisconsin, and North Dakota. Burns attended Barnard University and was a member of the Lower East Side poetry community in the 1980s. She published only one volume of poems during her life, Riding the One-Eyed Ford (1981). Watch Burns read her poem "Alphabet City Serenade" (1987).

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