Wednesday, 29 July 2009

New Issue of Moloch


It was my blood and the language
That has been spoken into my blood.

I decided to explore
This wild place.

from Disappeared Language by Duane Locke


The new issue of Moloch has just been launched. 

This issue contains writing by L. Ward Abel, Claire Askew, Patricia Byrne,  Niamh Campbell, William Doreski, Noel Harrington, Alan King,  David Kowalczyt, Duane Locke, Geraldine Mitchell, Jackie Morrisey, Kenneth Pobo, Sean Ryan and Peter Schwartz

Artists include Oisín Byrne, Conor Callan, Nessa Darcy, Carol Eakins, Derek Fitzpatrick, Gareth Humphreys, Laura Knowles, Sarah Quigley and Damien O'Reilly.

Sunday, 26 July 2009

Pinback Magazine



Damien O'Reilly, an artist featured in Moloch, has hurled himself into the publishing world with the creation of a new magazine PiNBACK.  PiNBACK is a new 40 page literature and art magazine based in Cardiff. The idea is to create a platform of expression both literary and visually for anybody willing to get their voice out there. The magazine will be available in selected shops around Cardiff, Wales and Dublin, Ireland.
 
Issue One is completed and will be available in shops soon. Currently PiNBACK is looking for literature of all sorts for issue two. Poetry, stories, articles and random thoughts. There is no theme or size limit. All submissions will be considered.

They are also looking for artists / designers as part of their Gallery 
Section.
Email submissions (and any questions) to
pinback.magazine@yahoo.com
 
Pinback is also available to buy online directly from the publishers at http://stores.lulu.com/store.php?fAcctID=3991377

Wednesday, 1 July 2009

Over The Edge with readings by Ailbhe Darcy, John Corless, Tom Lavelle, Anthony Daly & John Liddy

THIS FRIDAY, July 3rd

My esteemed partner in crime, Ailbhe Darcy, will be in Galway reading at the Over The Edge Summer Poetry Special at Sheridan’s Wine Bar.  Since her relocation to Middle America her readings in Ireland have been few and far between, so do come along and catch it before she disappears again.

There is a wonderful lineup that night with John Corless, Tom Lavelle, Anthony Daly & John Liddy all reading.   You can find them all from 8pm in Sheridan’s Wine Bar, 14-16 Church Yard Street, Galway.


Ailbhe Darcy has published poems in Ireland, Britain and the US, and writes critically for a number of publications including The Stinging Fly and Verbal. She recently appeared as part of the prestigious Poetry Ireland Introductions Series, and has read at the London Irish Centre, Poetry Café, RADA, Dublin’s Liberty Hall and Keats’ House. She has just embarked on a PhD in contemporary poetry at the University of Notre Dame. Her poetry features in the recently published anthology Voice Recognition 21 Poets For The 21st Century(Bloodaxe) and will also feature in the generation defining anthology to be published by Bloodaxe early next year Identity Parade: New British and Irish Poets.

 

John Corless lives and writes in County Mayo in the Irish Riviera. His poetry is a mix of political, satirical, ecclesiastical and rural and has been described as Paul Durcan meets The Sawdoctors. He has an MA in Creative Writing from Lancaster University (2008) and is currently researching for a PhD. He writes poetry, fiction and drama. His work has been published in magazines and collections worldwide. Some of his poems have been referred to the Attorney General for approval. His creative writing classes in the Castlebar campus of GMIT are very popular. He hopes to be a full-time writer when he grows up. Thankfully, there's no evidence of that happening yet. His first collection of poems Are You Ready? was published recently by Salmon Poetry.

 

Tom Lavelle lives in Galway and works as the finance director of a manufacturing company. He is currently a participant in the Advance Poetry Workshop at Galway Arts Centre and as part of that group read his work at last year’s Clifden Arts Week. His poems have appeared in Revival, The Stony Thursday BookCrannógBoyne BerriesWest 47 online and The Cuirt Annual. Tom was shortlisted for the Cúirt Over The Edge showcase reading in both 2008 and 2009 and in the 2008 Over The Edge New Writer of The Year competition. This coming Autumn he will be embarking on an M Phil in Writing at the University of Glamorgan.

 

Anthony Daly was born in Galway in 1979. He gained a BA Degree in Classics and History from NUI. Galway. He has been writing poetry for about the past decade and has published several poems in the local press. He has acted with Selkie Theatre in 2008 in their production last summer of Goodwill, as well as in several other productions and shows over the last six years. Anthony has been a many time participant in the Cúirt Poetry Grand Slam, was a Featured Reader at the March 2005 Over The Edge: Open Reading and was shortlisted for the 2007 Cúirt Over The Edge Showcase reading.

 

John Liddy was born in Youghal, Co. Cork, grew up in Limerick and now lives in Spain. His poetry collections include Boundaries (1974), The Angling Cot (1991), Song of the Empty Cage (1997), Wine and Hope (1999), Cast-A-Net (2003) & The Well: New and Selected Poems (2007). La Barca de la Arena (a translation by Francisco Rivero in Spanish of The Angling Cot) & Poisionous Pleasure(a tanslation by John Liddy from Tosigo Ardento by José Maria Álvarez) were published recently. His work has been widely praised by critics such as Desmond O’Grady and Patrick Galvin. He lives in Madrid.

 

There is no entrance fee. All welcome. For further information contact 087-6431748.

Over The Edge acknowledges the ongoing generous financial support of the Arts Council and Galway City Council.

 

http://www.overtheedgeliteraryevents.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, 3 March 2009

Pinback submissions



PiNBACK is a new non-profit literature and art magazine based in Cardiff.   Started by Damien O'Reilly, a wonderful artist who has contributed quite a lot of original work to Moloch over the years, it aims to create a platform of expression both literary and visually for anybody willing to get their voice out there.  The magazine will be available in selected shops around Cardiff, Wales.  

Currently PiNBACK is looking for literature of all sorts. Poetry, stories, articles and random thoughts. There is no theme or size limit. All submissions will be considered.  Send them to damienoreilly@yahoo.com

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 KeagneySuzanne Van der LingenHendersonGrace McEvoyLuobo 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.  


The awards are decided by public vote, so do go to the site and show her your support!! 

Claire Askew's work has appeared in Poetry NewsPoetry Scotland and The Edinburgh Review, among others, and was recently selected to appear in The Scottish Poetry Library's 20 Best Scottish Poems of 2008 anthology.  Her first collection, The Mermaid and the Sailors, is due from Red Squirrel Press in summer 2009.  Claire is the Editor in Chief of Read This Magazine, and also runs Read This Press and the writing advice blog One Night Stanzas.  She lives in Edinburgh, Scotland.  

Read some of her poems here 

Saturday, 17 January 2009

Free Art Friday, January the 23rd




If you've missed the boat on handing in Free Art Friday it's not too late to take part!  Simply print out this label and stick it on the back of your artwork (Label Link) and hang it up in Dublin somewhere.  You should include your details on the Label so whoever finds it can email you!

Or if you simply want to find a treasure to brighten your home to make sure you go into town on Friday and see if you stumple upon some artwork!

One of the artists featured in last months issue is taking part; Will St Ledger is not new to the idea of giving away artwork, in a recent exhibition he encouraged his guests to attempt to steal his work from the gallery, those that were successful were allowed to keep the artwork.