Tuesday, 3 March 2009
Pinback submissions
Friday, 20 February 2009
The Jabberwocky Series
We are bombarded with words everywhere we look. We want to make them good words.
T h e J a b b e r w o c k y S e r i e s intends to change the way poetry is read, and who reads it, by taking it out of unopened books and off the shelf, and placing it back in the world, where it will be seen. We want poetry on walls – gallery walls, brick walls, billboards, shop shutters. We want to use the spaces used to sell things to say things. We want people to be exposed to it, and interested in it, and moved by it. It is a new way to publish, a new way to communicate, and a new way to use the city.
Available Space is the first poetry exhibition in the series. It will open on the 12th March, and is being held in an empty commercial property on the main square in Smithfield.
The exhibition is a collaborative project between The Dodo Collective, an emerging artists’ collective working in new media, and Alan Jude Moore, a Dublin poet. It will feature one poem by Moore, presented five times by the five artists. They will use film, projection, illustration and installation, challenging the view of poetry as a staid art form, and demonstrating the concept of reading it in a completely different way.
By using a dormant commercial space, and others blank spaces like it as the series goes on, we want to begin to use they city that we have made as a place to be lived in, and let it become a canvas for art and thought.
The theme of the exhibition is this idea of urban awareness - awareness of real life taking place in a place of business, and of how we communicate with each other and our environment in the hub of a city. The title, theme and location connect to draw attention to the way in which the successes and failures of the economy affect out physical environment, and incorporate the ideas of isolation and urban anomie.
Throughout T h e J a b b e r w o c k y S e r i e s, the themes, locations and collaborators will change, while remaining faithful to the constant project of putting words on walls. We plan to involve both budding and blooming writers and artists, creating a community of ideas and a new audience to hear and see them.
The Dodo Collective is Simon Mc Keagney, Suzanne Van der Lingen, Henderson, Grace McEvoy, Luobo Gelda.
The Poet Alan Jude Moore is a Dublin born poet whose work has been widely published in Ireland and abroad. His fiction has twice been short-listed for the Hennessy Literary Award for New Irish Writing, and has published two collections; Black State Cars, in 2004 and Lost Republics in 2008, both with Salmon Poetry. His work was recently included in MARKS, a collaborative project between the visual arts magazine Circa and Dublin literary magazine The Stinging Fly.
Two of Alan's poems, Drift and Alphaville, featured in the last issue of Moloch.
His unpublished poem ‘Pipeline’ will be the basis for the exhibition.
Monday, 26 January 2009
New Scottish Writer of the Year
Claire Askew, a poet whose poem 'Clearance' will appear in the next issue of Moloch, has been nominated for New Scottish Writer of the Year 2009 for her work with Read This, One Night Stanzas and her own writing.
Saturday, 17 January 2009
Free Art Friday, January the 23rd
Writers For Peace
Poetry Ireland in association with Trócaire and Amnesty International have organised a reading of some of Ireland’s best writers, reading in response to the situation in Gaza. Each writer will read for 5-7 minutes at this non-partisan event.
Confirmed readers include Anne Enright, John F. Deane, Eiléan Ni Chuilleanáin, Colm Toibin, Susan McKay, Hugo Hamilton, Éilís Dhuibhne, Lia Mills, Macdara Woods, Ronit Lentin, Peter Sirr and Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill.
Monday, 12 January 2009
Over The Edge: Sixth Anniversary Reading with Tom French, Lisa Frank & Áine Tierney
Over The Edge Celebrates Sixth Birthday with Reading by Tom French The first ‘Over The Edge: Open Reading’ of 2009 takes place in Galway City Library on Thursday, January 22nd, 6.30-8.00pm. The Featured Readers are Lisa Frank, Áine Tierney & Tom French. This is a very special occasion as it is now exactly six years since Over The Edge was born in Galway City Library in January 2003. Áine Tierney is from Rosmore, Co. Tipperary. She is a secondary school English teacher and has an MA in Writing from the National University of Ireland, Galway. Her writing has appeared in various magazines and newspapers. She recently had a short story published in the Silverfish anthology, which was funded by South Tipperary County Council’s Per Cent for Art Scheme. She is currently redrafting her first novel. Tom French is a graduate of NUI Galway and the University of Limerick. His first collection of poems Touching the Bones(Gallery Press) was awarded a Forward Prize for Best First collection in 2002. In 2001 he read at the Cúirt Literature Festival. Recent poems of his have been published in http://www.themanchesterreview.co.uk/ . His second collection The Blood Line is nearing completion. He lives with his family in county Meath where he works for the library service.
Lisa Frank was born and raised in Los Angeles, but spent most of the past ten years in the Pacific Northwest before moving toIreland in December, 2006. In 2005 she received her MFA in Creative Writing from Eastern Washington University. She has had work published in American literary journals, as well as an essay published in a university textbook on writing, and was awarded 2nd and 3rd place in Bad Kitty Films 2000 Short Screenplay competition. She currently works as a freelance editor.
There will be an open-mic after the Featured Readers have finished. New readers are always most welcome. The MC for the evening will be Susan Millar DuMars. For further details phone 087-6431748.
Over The Edge acknowledges the ongoing generous financial support of Galway City Council & The Arts Council.http://overtheedgeliteraryevents.blogspot.com