Posts Tagged ‘Vermont Poetry’

A Long Time

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Driving home from South Burlington this afternoon, I caught the latter part of Jane Lindholm’s 2009 interview with Galway Kinnell on Vermont Public Radio—a repeat. Mr. Kinnell was one of the first poets I read when I embarked on my own self-study in 2003—having in mind that he was the quintessential Vermont poet. Everyone I knew loved his poetry. His books are stocked in every bookstore throughout the state. I had a vision of him in some cabin in a shady pocket of the Kingdom, pencil-scratching through notebooks, which kept piling up in a dark corner.

This is (was) my vision of a mountain poet, a Vermont poet. I imagined David Budbill, walking stick in hand, tooling along on wooded paths only he knows, and coming home to his cabin in the secret nook where he lives, to pencil-scratch away his meditations. And Robert Frost, who kept his cot in a few different cabins between Vt and NH. Hayden Carruth, Bob Arnold, Ruth Stone, the list goes on. Because we live in The Green Mountain State, I had a vision of what a crusty old Vermont poet should be. It always involved being a hermit in the mountains. I aimed to be one of them. (more…)

Being Aware of the Poetry Around Us

Friday, April 9th, 2010

Being Aware of the Poetry Around Us

POETRY Alive! Complete List!

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

Poetry Alive logo

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National Poetry Month Reading at VCFA

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

NATIONAL POETRY MONTH GROUP READING (FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE)

MONTPELIER, VT — On Friday, April 23, 2010 The Vermont College of Fine Arts (VCFA) of Montpelier, Vt will host a group poetry reading in celebration of National Poetry Month (April, 2010) in the College Hall Chapel.  It starts at 4:30 p.m. The event is part of Montpelier Alive’s poetry-themed Art Walk, occurring throughout downtown Montpelier venues, and compliments the POETRY Alive! exhibit on display during the entire month.

The evening features six Vermont poets, ranging from emerging student writers to established working poets.  They will each present a short reading of their work, followed by a book signing and reception. (more…)

Montpelier National Poetry Month 2010 Events

Saturday, March 27th, 2010

Montpelier Art Walk

Date: Friday, April 23, 2010
Time 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Place: various downtown venues, Montpelier
Downtown Montpelier will be abuzz with art patrons and poetry lovers as they stroll through the streets from venue to venue viewing the current art exhibits and reading poems in the POETRY Alive! installation. A project of Montpelier Alive.
Contact: Suzanne Eikenberry: director[at]montpelieralive.org or (802) 223-9604. (more…)

POETRY Alive! MHS poems

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

Rainy days and Monday are good for poetry!  I joined Suzanne Eikenberry of Montpelier Alive, Robin Sales and Ryan Deery of the Kellogg-Hubbard Library to install our first “preview” round of  poems for our POETRY Alive! Project at 50 Main Street in downtown Montpelier, Vt. Across the street is City Hall.  The town teems with visitors waiting in line for the next showing in the Green Mountain Film Festival’s schedule.  And here we are transforming an empty downtown storefront into garden of words. Come and see for yourself! The entire exhibit will be up through April 30th.

Phayvanh MHS PA

And here’s Ryan Deery and Leah Grossman, who helped us to align the pages:

Ryan and Leah MHS PA

Robin put together one of the windows:

Robin Sales MHS PA

As did Suzanne:

Suzanne MHS PA

Come by and read a few!

MGS Poems

Poets featured include: Marielle Johnson, Kerrin McCadden, Isaac Reilly, Kate Sprout, Izabel Nielsen, Emma Schoenberg, Ezekiel Smith, Maggie Kinzel, and Julia Francis.

POETRY Alive!

Saturday, March 20th, 2010

It’s already the Vernal Equinox, and I have been slow at updating my blog. Feeling a bit guilty. Not a bit.

Last month, Suzanne Eikenberry of Montpelier Alive suggested that I attend a meeting of the Promotions Committee. I was already writing the weekly e-newsletter and had earlier mentioned my interest in stepping into the role of Art Walk coordinator, if Art Walk was in need of one. Rob Hitzig of the Lazy Pear had been coordinator, but he closed the gallery in January to focus on his wood craft, and was unsure if he would continue.

The Art Walk story is one for another post. In that initial meeting, Suzanne mentioned that someone at the library was putting together a poetry display in downtown Montpelier for the National Poetry Month. I ended up contacting Rachel Senechal, the Program and Development Coordinator of the Kellogg-Hubbard Library, to indicate my interest and volunteer my services.

She, along with Ryan Deery, the library’s Vista Member, had wanted to ask downtown retailers to display a poem throughout the month of April. So began POETRY Alive! When I met them, they had already put together a sizable list of Vermont-based poets, pulled their books from the shelves, and received some commitments from local businesses. Vermont poets gave us a theme and made it easier to obtain permissions. I helped them to identify more poets, wrote up a call for poetry and sent it off to my networks—and went home with an armload of books to read.

Suzanne came by and took a photo of us on Saint Patrick’s Day.
The POETRY Alive! crew

We’ve collected poems from 80+ poets, matched them to about 30+ businesses. The display will feature work from teenagers as well as adults. We have unpublished writers as well as established poets. And Vermonters who live on through their legacies like Grace Paley and Robert Frost. The selection reflects a variety of writing styles. We had a short deadline, and so not everyone is included here. But I’m really happy to have this many different people in the exhibition.

Also as varied are the businesses that chose to participate: Montpelier Pharmacy, Chittenden Bank, First in Fitness, along with bookstores, eateries, boutiques and others. Many of them requested more than one poem. The library itself will be a poetry trove—installing 25 poems throughout the entire building. Each venue decided how to display the work. The Hunger Mountain Co-op will hand-paint haikus on the café windows, so diners can read them while also enjoying the view of the river. The Knitting Studio will create a knitted piece inspired by Mary Elder Jacobsen of North Calais. Birchgrove Baking will create an artfully decorated cake display inspired by Phyllis Larrabee of Woodbury. And Artisans Hand Craft Gallery will have an outdoor poetry garden that “grows” throughout the month, using poems by Cora Brooks and Jonah Neale, both of Montpelier.

We’ll be installing a “preview” on Monday, featuring a selection of work from Montpelier High School. It will be in the window of the former Capitol Video space on Main Street, across from City Hall.

In the meanwhile, we’re working on the guide/map and writing press releases, doing radio spots, and spreading the word. I hope to run into many poetry lovers strolling through the streets of our little town next month. I’m looking forward to our busy business district transforming into a walkable anthology of contemporary Vermont poetry. See you there.