Enemies of the South


on Saturday April 27th at 6.30pm, at Bristol's Arnolfini, a South West Edition of the Camarade series takes place as part of the Enemies project. The event will be part of the Arnolfini's remarkable 4 days festival programme, curated by Jamie Eastman, which features many of the best avant garde poets and lingual artists working in the UK at the moment. More info on 4 days here  http://www.arnolfini.org.uk/whatson/series/4-days and more on the Enemies event specifically here http://www.arnolfini.org.uk/
The exciting lineup is thus:
 
 
Exciting to take Enemies outside of London again, and this edition of Camarade also co-incides with the Bristol Poetry Festival. Please do join us if in the vicinity of the city.

the Synesthesia exhibition

My own personal trajectory working in collaboration, like so many things (perhaps sadly) comes, in some part, from the last five years I've spent working at the British Museum. Some of the most remarkable artists, and people, I've ever met work there (among some of the least remarkable) and inevitably, as people such as this become your friends, you work with them. Last night when I attended the private view of Gabrielle Cooper's wonderful Synesthesia exhibition at the Darnley gallery just off Mare st in Hackney, my work with Ben Morris and David Kelly was on display, alongside work by Robert Hitzeman, Francesca Marcaccio while Alexander Kell took photographs, and curators / artist like Siobhan Feeney, Mamiko Karusudani and others attended. Everyone has or had worked at the museum. Whatever must be said about working a dead end job for food moneys, it does produce art.
Gabrielle did an extraordinary job with the exhibition, she was so remarkably professional and the books in the boxe with David and Ben were hung beautifully. Ben and I's work was nailed to the wall, while my work with David was strung like leather floor to ceiling. Such a privilege to be part of an exhibition such as this, most especially because I write first and foremost and rarely get to it back and admire stuff on walls. Moreover, with David and Ben's achievements being so considerable with these pieces, I can hide behind their talent. The pictures here, again remarkable from Alexander Kell, are a proper testament to the exhibition.

Jurassic Strip in Here Comes Everyone

http://herecomeseveryone.me/ the second issue that editor adam steiner has been kind enough to take my work for HERE COMES EVERYONE. This issue, Dinosaurs, and examples of my collaboration with David Kelly, the artiste, about JP, known as Jurassic Strip. They published 4, took a little bit of a liberty with the pagination etc...gluing the text over the work. Ah, whatever. Ched ched cheb, the poems are all about the glory of a park full of dinosaurs, relocated to the middle east or something, so the fact that they appeared in what appears to be a granny magazine, all plastered up in microsoft paint is kind of fitting http://herecomeseveryone.me/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/The-Dinosaurs-Issue.pdf We're on page 26. Everyone reads pdf books online, so the thousands who weep at the sight of dinos and their poetry will be able to choc my twitter feed with frozen berries.


Sarah Zakzouk on Reel Iraq poetry

http://www.reorientmag.com/2013/04/reel-iraq/ "Reel Words, an evening of poetry in translation, was but a small element of the Reel Festivals lineup. This year’s festival, Reel Iraq, was comprised of a series of cultural events marking the ten-year anniversary of the invasion of Iraq by US and UK forces. Dubbed ‘Operation Iraqi Freedom’, America and Britain’s stated mission was to liberate the Iraqi people from despotism, and disarm Saddam Hussein  of ‘Weapons of Mass Destruction’. Serving as a poignant reminder of the consequences of the invasion, Reel Iraq brought the nation’s cultural sphere to the forefront, exploring Iraqi contributions to art, culture, and creative expression in the UK, during a time of conflict and unrest. Featuring film, art exhibitions, poetry readings, and concerts, as well as panel discussions with audiences across the UK, the festival not only celebrated cultural diversity, but also provided a forum for people to reflect on the suffering and hardship endured by the people of Iraq during the past decade.

Hosted by Ryan Van Winkle, Reel Festival’s’ Literary Coordinator, in collaboration with Maintenant and 3AM Magazine, the Reel Words event was an evening of poise, impact, and eloquence. Introducing the readers of the evening, 3AM’s Poetry Editor, Steven Fowler, emphasised the theme of the evening as a reminder to people of the ongoing events in Iraq, and spoke about the cyclical nature of news stories presented via Western media. ‘It might have been our country, our culture that was invaded … this [event] is about peoples’ lives’, he remarked, as he asked the audience to compare the situation in Iraq with that of the UK.
The first half of the night played host to a variety of poets. Particularly outstanding was Patrick Coyle, who read a poem entitled Kirsty Wark’s Questions to Tony Blair, Reversed. Dictating a series of events backwards, Coyle counted down as the narrative progressed in Kirsty’s dialogue with Blair. Images were confused, and the narration distorted, as he disoriented minds with his verse in reverse. Highly engaging, his careful intonation lending itself to the backwardness of the text, the audience was still able to make sense of his words in their chaotic format....."

The Poetry School: a cameo

http://www.poetryschool.com/ The Poetry school is an intriguing thing. An admirable endeavour, but one, perhaps because of my background in the avant garde (or towards it, a bit more than some), that I haven't encountered often. My first such tryst came thanks to Chris McCabe, who kindly invited me to join him for the last hour of his penultimate class on collaborations. Set back on Lambeth walk, amidst boutique shops and a few housing estates, the evening was spent chatting with genuinely engaged and interesting people about Enemies, Camarade and my opinions on collaboration in and outside of poetry. I brought some books, books in boxes and anecdotal stories along with the theories. Then I joined the group in a frightening local pub afterwards... The hope, of course, in such a class is that the teacher is just leading the flow of an organic exchange, rather than being demonstrative. In this situation, where those attending were so erudite, artists and poets of significant merit in their own right, and the teacher was so capable and multifaceted as a poet himself, this was the inevitable result. It is really considerable that people will pay to attend such a focused programme about poetry, and collaborations at that! after working a full day, and bring so much creativity, energy and enthusiasm. Respect to everyone involved. I'm sure the relationships began on the night will bear fruit in the future. Here is a link to one of the students in the class speaking with the Poetry School too. http://www.poetryschool.com/courses/featured-student--sophie-herxheimer.php 

2 poems from Epithalamium in Shadow Train

http://www.shadowtrain.com/id462.html

the journal is long standing, long respected, edited by Ian Seed. This is issue number 40.


Winter is Coming

now everyone is saying "winter is coming"
Vikings are coming, & they've long known
the north doesn't forget why it sailed
dumb hands & are not ... is not my favourite tip, & the wedding
is ruined by anxiousness amidst battle
I am back to the labour
sheetcircling / scissoring rapidly jealous
of when it is fine / to ask why all that waste of women?
because man is / the water producer
cleansing quick
the first & worst we have for we have to!
they are watching through their
glasses on stairs, carefully
laid out with barbecue mats

Great Poets Steal: a collaborative writing workshop with Christodoulos Makris

http://yesbutisitpoetry.blogspot.co.uk/2013/03/great-poets-steal.html Great Poets Steal: a collaborative writing workshop with Christodoulos Makris / Blanchardstown Library, Dublin 15 / 2pm, Saturday 20 April 2013

"The act of choosing and reframing tells us as much about ourselves as a story about our mother’s cancer operation" - Kenneth Goldsmith,'Uncreative Writing'

Its concept stolen from Steven Fowler's Patchwork Renga workshop conducted at the Poetry Library in London last June, and its title from the famous (mis)quote attributed to TS Eliot, this collaborative writing workshop aims to exercise the faculties of selecting and connecting text...."

Interview at Dept with Richard Barrett and Marcus Slease for Elephanche

http://departmentzine.blogspot.co.uk/2013/03/marcus-slease-sj-fowler-elephanche.html


Richard. Hi Marcus and Steve. We’re talking today about your joint work Elephanche published by Department Press. I was familiar with both your work prior to reading the text yet nevertheless was taken completely by surprise by Elephanche – it seemed so different to me; that’s different to both the work of your own that I’d read before and different to pretty much anything else I’d come across previously. So, I have two initial questions then: how did Elephanche come about? I mean in terms of what influences etc fed into it? And, thinking of continuities and differences, how do you two view Elephanche in the context of the rest of your work?

Marcus. For me Elephanche is an extension of my fascination with the poet Kenneth Koch’s crossing and recreating genres. He has done some terrific comics that are somewhere between poetry and comics. He wrote a terrific novel, The Red Robbins, where Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny are mortal enemies in a post-colonial context. His plays are unlike any other poet’s plays. He once said in an interview that we tend to remember only a few minutes of a play. He wanted his plays to be a condensed form of a play. Sometimes his plays are between minimalist poetry and vaudeville theatre. In all of his work he displays a light touch. What others have called a non-oppositional avant garde.

Steven. Hey Richard! Well I think Marcus’ passion for Koch & co really seemed to align with an interest I had in theatre that was clearly against ‘theatre’, most especially the avant garde tradition of the 20th century, people like Ionesco and Ghelderode are big for me. I kind of hate theatre, I certainly hate going to the theatre. But I read the texts of plays, and have found so much in quite obscure playwrights. In a way reading these plays through the lens of poetry I came to similar conclusions as Marcus, that the play as a form can be eminently, and vitally poetic, only my influences were less aware of this context. I thought Elephanche could allow me to take my own poetic into a new form and somehow subside it, or conceal it, knowing most readers would be thinking through the elephant in the room, that the lines were meant to be acted out, and that would allow a kind of aesthetic juxtaposition to take place between contextual expectation and reality.

R. How did you two come to collaborate? Did you recognise a complementarity about each other’s work which suggested a collaboration might be fruitful or rather was the opposite the case – you were curious to see what would result from a coming together of differing styles?

S. Elephanche truly began from Marcus and I being friends I think, I’ve got so much time for him as a human being and liking his work too, appreciating its quality and its difference from my own work, I really wanted to develop something substantial with him as a collaboration. I think the reason I’m in poetry as a community act is to find people who write so well they make me think I could never come close to achieving what they do, because of the originality of their expression and voice, or whatever you’d call it. I find this in Marcus’ work.

M. Steven and I began working on the plays over a year ago and performed a few at the Writer’s Forum. I think we had two very different aesthetics at work. I think one of the differences is maximalist versus minimalist. I was working with minimalism and Steven was working with maximalism. Another difference might be that Steven was working within the tradition of the historical avant garde and I was working within first and second generation NY School poetry.
As you mention, I think there is a precedent for this with the work of Tom Raworth. Raworth is obviously influenced by NY School poetry (among others and vice versa) but his writing is nothing like what we might typical associate with NY School poetics. His poetics is something entirely unique both on the page and in performance. I can only hope we achieve some of Tom’s originality in our plays. For me he is a huge inspiration.


R. And could you tell me how you both managed the collaborative process on this project – maybe talking as well about how this project compared to previous collaborations you’ve been involved with?

S. Yeah in the last year I’ve been involved in over eighty collaborations. At first we exchanged whole plays, going from one to the next and sitting them aside each other in the collection. More recently we truly integrated those texts, writing over and through our lines, adapting our own poetics to each others, depending on the nature of each separate piece. There are 9 plays, and I think the book is actually quite concise, it captures a certain narrative between us that actually ends up being very sympathetic.

M. In terms of process, Steven wrote a play and then I wrote a play. We went back and forth one play at a time. Gradually our plays started to speak to each other. For example, Steven wrote a play with a character named Marcus in Trieste and I wrote a play with a character named Steven Fowler on the London tube using the poetry of Lisa Jarnot. The creative translation of Tim Atkins and the disparate collage techniques of Jeff Hilson were an influence in this process for me.

The final editing stage was more radical. Steven realised that we needed to collaborate more fully. So I edited the plays he wrote. I inserted some of the minimalist non-oppositional aesthetic of NY School poetics. Often this took the form of random lines from selected poems of Frank O’ Hara. These were chosen randomly. Or perhaps random is the wrong word. I don’t know if random exists. They were chosen without the interference of the sometimes rational fascist mindset. Steven edited the plays I wrote and expanded them with his maximalist approach. I think we both realised we did not want to iron out the tensions between the maximalist and minimalist or the humour/light touch and  grotesqueness. An issue for me in collaboration (whether writing with various selves or another human body) is whether to keep it chunky or smooth it out. Both chunky and smooth have their merits. I would say we mostly have chunky here. 

R. What general thoughts on collaborations do you have? I mean, what gains and losses (if any) does the collaborative process bring?

S. All gains for me. The collaborator becomes a source for new work, and new work is the life of life. I grow when engaged in that process with another human being, as long as I admire them or their work as a human being, then it can only allow me perspective on my own ideas and work, and more understanding of why I like what I like and write what I write.

R. The cover image of Elephanche – that’s by Tom Raworth right? How did Tom become involved with the project?

S. Tom has been immensely generous to me over the last year or so, I’ve had the pleasure of visiting with him a few times, having some tea and scones and that. One afternoon the conversation between myself, Tom, his wife and my wife ended up exploring the notion of an elephant who was employed on a barge floating down the rhine crushing grapes to make wine while firing grapes from its trunk at tourists, and similar things. The Elephanche artwork was born that night I believe and Tom was kind enough to let me use it for the book.

R. Raworth’s presence does seems entirely fitting though of course given the use you make in Elephanche of text from O’Hara and Berrigan (someone, I forget who now sorry, having once wondered how Tom Raworth could ever be described as anything other than a New York poet). Could you talk a little bit about why the New York poets for you both at just this particular time? What was it that drew you to their work now?

S. Honestly my knowledge of the New York poets in quite shallow, they don’t exert an influence over me because I seem to be saving them for the future and they didn’t naturally come up in my strange, individuated reading arc. I will do though, Marcus and Tim Atkins have been generous in allowing me educated access to that world of work.

David Morley reviews Dear World...anthology in the Guardian

http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2013/apr/12/dear-world-nathan-hamilton-review


"As to the poets who made it into Dear World, there are predictable highs, plateaux and crescendi. And amid the cacophony there are striking individual poems and selections from the likes of Emily Berry, Ben Borek, James Byrne, Tom Chivers, Elizabeth Guthrie, Toby Martinez de las Rivas, Emily Hasler, Oli Hazzard, Holly Hopkins, Sarah Howe, Luke Kennard, Frances Leviston, Éireann Lorsung, Michael McKimm, Kei Miller, Sam Riviere and Jack Underwood. These poets simply stand out because they write most like themselves and their poems are the least like so many other poems. Exemplary among them is Sandeep Parmar, whose extended ghazal "Against Chaos" is a lesson in the lineated locations of feeling:
Love could not have sent you, in this shroud of song,
to wield against death your hollow flute, tuned to chaos.
Whatever the Ancients said, matter holds the world
to its bargain of hard frost. But life soon forgets chaos.
He who has not strode the full length of age, has counted
then lost count of days that swallow, like fever, dark chaos.
And you, strange company, in the backseat of childhood
propped on the raft of memory like some god of chaos.
But what caught me by surprise, and made me convert to the bite and bustle of Dear World was the editorial courage to embrace poetic sequences. They lend a magical quality to the book, and its length allowed them to unroll. This is an act of grace. Longer poems were given space to breathe, and they achieve intense realisation in the hands of Patrick Coyle ("Alphabetes" is a sensation) and Jo Crot (the exquisite "from Poetsplain"); but also in the expertly challenging sequences by SJ Fowler, Jim Goar, Meirion Jordan, Chris McCabe, Keston Sutherland, Simon Turner, Ahren Warner and Steve Willey.
Dear World does well by these cumulative, unfolding, cloud-formations of sound and language. It is friendly to poetry's inherent difficulties and demands. Which, to my mind, makes it the bravest anthology of poetry of the past few years."

Electronic Voice Phenomena | UK Tour 10-25 May 2013

UK TOUR | MAY 10-25 2013
ELECTRONIC VOICE PHENOMENA

Electronic Voice Phenomena is a new experimental literature, performance and music show that feeds on the corpse of paranormal pseudo-science.

The EVP programme takes its inspiration from Konstantin Raudive's notorious 'Breakthrough' experiments of the 1970s, where he captured voices-from-beyond in electronic noise. Themes of otherness, the profane and the divine join with new approaches to writing speaking and performing in a suite of new interlaced works - featuring poets Hannah SilvaRoss Sutherland and SJ Fowler, and hauntological synth-pop group Outfit.*

TOUR DATES

All tickets are now onsale.

10 May    THE SAGE, GATESHEAD
15 May    ST GEORGE’S HALL, LIVERPOOL
17 May    THE BASEMENT, BRIGHTON
18 May    RICH MIX, LONDON
19 May    THE CUBE, BRISTOL
22 May    ANTHONY BURGESS FOUNDATION, MANCHESTER
23 May    ARC STOCKTON
25 May    NORWICH ARTS CENTRE

* Special guests include Hetain Patel, Richard Milward, Holly Pester & more.
  See full listings for details.



Website  electronicvoicephenomena.net
Facebook facebook.com/electronicvoicephenomena

Twitter  @_EVP
Produced by Mercy & Penned in the Margins
Funded by Arts Council England

a poem for Marcus Slease on the occasion of his 39th birthday - a collaborative wish wish with David Kelly

Eating Bulgogi, memoriesare not the
porno a poem for Marcus Slease on the occasion of his 39th birthday

—and visual translation

- —-(man under a tree)

- – — – - by erkembode

david kelly


does that mean if you come here, you find?
I saw him see snow & ask ‘long, outside?’
does that mean if there’s snowfall snow hero fell fell?
do you know Daughn Gibson of the desert? u shud
write a song about an open road hobo
called the Mew Too & get sued by the Splendids
for foreign snow is a stage between glass & friends

remember the tree in the story, not the sitter
the throne is where it’s at, not the Kinga neighbouring love with wave its way jessMongol mermaid will not sight bloodbut that’ll not stop the threads clenchingthere are chicken cheekbones so delicatea man could not have told you, not possiblehere here _ _ _ in koe rea, who did I say, again?the performance of a thick, remonstration of regret

the worms of the Brain migrate to the pot
for the waste of human fruit (more fool them
it’s the coffee that’s the thing, the black choc)
it’s a long way down from the temple to the outre dark
but is it worth it for / depends on whome & with where
that which you’ll have clamped off will be so
let us them (mate) tell me about it

Tengen magazine - issue 5 - poems from the Estates of Westeros

http://tengenmagazine.wordpress.com/ - http://www.issuu.com/tengenmag
Really happy to say some of my work with Ben Morris, for our Estates of Westeros collaboration, has appeared in the UCL based Tengen magazine, thanks to Rob Kiely, for their 5 issue, OBRA, the technology issue. A really considered publication to be a part of.

PRESS RELEASE: Like This Press Launches Two New Collaborative Books in Boxes by SJ Fowler, David Kelly, and Ben Morris


 
I am delighted to announce the latest publications from Like This Press: two new collaborations by SJ Fowler with Ben Morris and David Kelly, the Estates of Westeros and Gilles de Rais. Each box contains 34 loose-leafed A5 postcards, blending text and image.
 
The Estates of Westeros is where avant garde poetry meets avant garde illustration. Whether perception or reality, housing estates are environments of occlusion, claustrophobia and damage, and poetry about them has a responsibility to reflect this complexity and intensity in its tone and form. The Estates of Westeros is a meditation on this living space through the universe of George RR Martin's Game of Thrones, and where Gilles de Rais explores the absurdity of mythmaking in that which once was real, the Estates ... explores the grinding realism at the heart of the fantastical.
 
In Gilles de Rais – an interchangeable narrative reflection on the life and legend of Gilles de Rais – this fusion of avant garde poetry and modernist line drawing aims to satirise and subvert the manner in which the monstrous myth surrounding such de Rais is echoed in our own time by Jimmy Saville. This is the disjunctive folklore of idiot's resounding through the ages, from 15th century France to 21st century Britain.
 
Both books can be purchased for £9 direct from Like This Press: http://www.likethispress.co.uk/publications/sjfowlerandbenmorris
 
Special offer: buy the Estates of Westeros with Gilles de Rais together for £15 from here: http://www.likethispress.co.uk/specialoffers
 
the Estates of Westeros and Gilles de Rais launched as part of the Enemies of the North project on 30 March, at the Cornerhouse, Manchester. Both books will feature also in the group exhibition,Synesthesia, organised by Leap into the Void & held at Darnley Gallery, in Hackney, London, 12-19 April. For more information, see: http://leapintothevoid.co.uk/2013/03/26/synesthesia-15th-19th-april-2013/
 
SJ Fowler is a poet living in London. He's published four collections of poetry including Fights (Veer books) and Minimum Security Prison Dentistry (AAA press), and has collections forthcoming from Penned in the Margins and Eggbox publishing. He has been commissioned by the Tate, the London Sinfonietta and Mercy and has read and exhibited across Europe. He curates the Enemies project, supported by the Jerwood Charitable Foundation, and Maintenant, a series of reading and interviews focusing on contemporary European poetics and collaboration. He is currently undertaking a Phd at the Contemporary Poetics Research Centre, Birkbeck College and is an employee of the British Museum. www.sjfowlerpoetry.com / www.blutkitt.blogspot.com / www.weareenemies.com / 
 
David Kelly is an artist working in the modernist tradition, currently with a centre of interest in collage. He has collaborated with and 'visually translated' numerous writers and poets including David Berridge, Daniele Pantano and SJ Fowler. His collaborative works have been exhibited at The Saison Poetry Library, The Horse Hospital, My Pixxa and Rich Mix. He received a degree from the University of Leeds School of Fine Art, History of Art & Cultural Studies in 2007 and is now an employee of the British Museum.
 
Ben Morris is a London based experimental musician and artist. He has been active in the UK underground music scene since 2005 and is best known as 1 half of Chora, which he formed with Robert Lye in Sheffield. He has gigged and toured extensively throughout Europe receiving critical praise in The Wire magazine, on webzines such as The Quietus, Dusted and Foxy Digitalis and on radio stations like WFMU (America), VPRO (Holland) and BBC radio 3. Chora have a large multi-format back catalogue on labels like ChocolateMonk, Singing Knives Records and Winebox Press. He has played gigs with Sonic Youth, Wolf Eyes and Psychic TV as well as shows at Colour Out Of Space Festival, the ICA and at the Liverpool Biennial. He has received commissions from Mercy for collaborative sound performances with Steven Fowler. Other musical projects include: Le Drapeau Noir, Akke Phallus Duo and he records/performs solo as Lost Wax…  
  
All enquiries to: nikolai@likethispress.co.uk
 
Very best wishes
 
Nikolai Duffy
Editor
Like This Press
 

Enemies of the North videos

Thanks to all who made Enemies of the North such an amazing evening of poetry at the Cornerhouse in Manchester this past Saturday. As I had hoped, the event celebrated the resurgent north west avant garde poetry and art scene with its energy, intensity and unpretentious affability, as well as evidencing the true width of poetic practice that defines the work coming out of the UK poetry scene at the moment. 13 performances below, many of which were collaborative pieces. Sarah Crewe & Jo Langton http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o9-LAMzfX1Y
Zoe Skoulding http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0-UHv9lFaxU
David Kelly & Daniele Pantano http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MkyqvxzUS1E
Matt Dalby & Steven Waling http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sBg1bC4bY1Y
James Byrne & Sandeep Parmar http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wm9I2Odu85A
Alec Newman & Ryan Van Winkle http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t9BJI1b7mqE
Richard Barrett & Nathan Thompson http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f87q-6KCGvY
Adam Steiner http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y4W8GlnLnOM
Chris McCabe & Tom Jenks http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ElDk44meVVU
Ben Morris http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R9XtlJmiwfs

3 publications were launched on the night, more information to follow.

Xing the Line: Freaklung reading

I was really happy to read at this event recently in Clerkenwell. Mendoza, who edits freaklung, which was excerpted in the angel exhaust which was being launched at this special edition of Xing the line, took my poems for this very issue in 2010, when I barely was about with poetry. I owe her that, and it felt like a return of sorts at this reading, because I am involved in a wide array of projects and their associated 'scenes' its nice to be with people who I feel are my base in many ways, if I have one. I really admire Rhys Trimble, who was incredible, and the rest of the readers, Emmerson / Raha / Holman / Hay & Mendoza. I did something I don't normally do too, chatting with everyone for a few hours afterward, catching up with people who are friends, who happen to be poets, who happen to be lovely people. 

Enemigos

http://www.richmix.org.uk/whats-on/event/enemigos-poetry-from-london-to-mexico-city/

ENEMIGOS: POETRY FROM LONDON TO MEXICO CITY

Thu 30 May 7pm
Free / Upstairs

The Enemies project presents a transliteration exchange programme featuring eight London based poets swapping texts with eight Mexico city based poets, in order to render their work into a new language via an inventive mode of reconfiguration. Curated by Rocio Ceron and SJ Fowler, the project will see a published volume released in 2013 by EBL-Cielo Abierto alongside readings in both London and Mexico City. This event will premiere this work in Europe and feature a host of British and Mexican poets reading some of the most exciting poetry on the planet with Tom Raworth, Carol Watts, Tom Chivers, David Berridge, Tim Atkins, Jeff Hilson, SJ Fowler, Holly Pester and Rocio Ceron.

the Rest is Noise

The rest is noise is an amazingly ambitious undertaking by the Southbank centre, an attempt to reflect upon the cultural force of the early 20th century in America and Europe and all that entails, speading its roots into art, poetry, music...This really is the period that possesses my work and research most, my interests being the early avant gardes, Dada, Eastern Europe, fin de siecle culture, Austria, Judaism, Russia and so on. I was lucky enough to be invited to be involved in two events over the America weekend. http://therestisnoise.southbankcentre.co.uk

The first event focused on EE Cummings and Wallace Stevens. I introduced, contextualised and led the questions - Matthew Caley was talking about Cummings’ work, and Oli Hazzard did the same relating to Wallace Stevens.The event was called Wallace Stevens and EE Cummings - America: a new world discovers its voice (1910 – 1945) held in the blue bar. I thought both Matthew and Oli spoke remarkably well, both such brilliant poets and interesting men, it was such a pleasure to be part of this event, and it had an impressive audience too.

The following day I gave a Bite lecture on Dada and ethics, talking about my research, and my theory about Dada and its ethical impetus, its drive to destroy traditional aesthetics, and how this travelled from Bukovina to Brooklyn, its beginnings in northern Romania... The focus also leaned toward New York dada, to stay on theme, for this talk. It went ok, I rambled a bit, winged a lot, spoke without notes, so it could've been better but overall flowed out alright. A tug on the thames interrupted me with its horn, which was appropriate. 

The others speakers were wonderful, some interesting stuff on the Spanish civil war and the Armoury dada show in NY, and Diane Silverthorn's talk on Mondrian in New York blew me away, an amazing woman, immensely down to earth and funny. The audience was also fantastic, intimidatingly big. To be part of an undertaking, if only a small part, this sizeable and ambitious and comprehensive, and to get to speak about a subject I am so passionate about, as though I were expert, will always be a privilege.

Runnymede International Poetry Festival

On a Baltic (conditions I enjoy) afternoon, I was delighted to contribute to the Runnymede International Poetry festival, curated by Robert Hampson, a remarkable poet himself, at the http://www.creativecollaboration.org.uk, a space I really like. It was a vanilla reading alongside Adrian Clarke, who was instrumental in my early development as a poet, and Simon Smith. The festival had a wonderful 4 day programme, more information here http://www.rhul.ac.uk/iquad/news/articles/runnymedeliterary.aspx and it was lovely to be a brief part of the whole.