26.3.13


You are invited to celebrate
a new poetry collection

by PAM BROWN

to be launched by
ANNA GIBBS

3pm
Sunday 28th April

at
Parkview Hotel
corner Mitchell Road & Harley Street
Alexandria

everyone welcome

Home by Dark is published by Shearsman Books
Click here for further information

How to get to Parkview Hotel
Mitchell & Harley, Alexandria
transport & map click here



Pam Brown's work is fearless, acutely observant, witty and wry. She delights in the curiosities of the the everyday, in notational sprezzatura, in the penetrating encapsulation of layers of time, chance and meaning with her twists of lexicon, diction and line break. This is a work of quotidian consternation, breaking through from irony to sheer fondness and painful shadows. She sees askew - and Home by Dark has its own poignant look at decades, bodies, and changes. Pam Brown is a wonderful writer, one of the scintillating wizards of Oz poetry.
                                              Rachel Blau DuPlessis

                                ___________________________

Pam Brown's Home by Dark is plainly beautiful: a subtle, moody daybook, warding off darkness and 'counter-revolutionary' boredom. Brown's engaged intelligence and light touch draws us into the flows and eddies of 'a poetry world' where 'everything is providential,/or not'. Reserved and intimate, swift and immersive, these poems are 'right here', in the midst of precarity: 'strike another match, go start anew'.
                                                                                                     Kate Lilley



21.3.13


Last night, Sydney-based sound poet, Amanda Stewart, and Jaap Blonk, who's visiting Australia from the Netherlands, made an exceptionally wonderful performance of theirs and others' energised and complex sound artistry (including Jaap's presentation of Kurt Schwitters''Ursonate'). The well-attended private function was held at Nick Shimmins' warehouse home a.k.a. 'The People's Republic of Camperdown'. It's difficult to find highlights to talk about when performances are so good that everything works - no stumbles, no slips, no technical mishaps. The unique part of the evening though was the finale when Amanda and Jaap presented a series of improvised pieces as a duet. They both were, in a word, fantastic.

For a photo album of no-flash grainery click here



12.3.13


New Steamers : Volume 4
Thanks Sam Langer & friends


Covers: details, paintings by Amber Wallis

click on the contents pages to enlarge & read the happy lists:


steamereditorATgmailDOTcom



8.3.13


I'm going to Apollinairesville for a week or so

My wineglass splits its sides with laughter



Le dromadaire
Avec ses quatres dromadiares
Don Pedro d'Alfaroubeira
Courut le monde et l'admira.
Il fit ce que je voudrais faire
Si j'avais quatres dromadaires.

The dromedary
With his four dromedaries
Don Pedro d'Alfarubeyra
Traveled the world and marvelled.
He did what I would do,
If I had four dromedaries.



On the seventh day I rest
I laud laziness





2.3.13


Portraits of a Mardi Gras - this pocket-size booklet was published anonymously as a response to police brutality at the first Gay Mardi Gras parade in Sydney in 1978. It's not in the current exhibition at the pop-up Mardi Gras Museum. It's a book of monochrome drawings by Frances Budden. Handwriting was of-the-times, part of a feminist lo-tech aesthetic. The drawings were included in an impromptu protest exhibition at Watters Gallery in East Sydney in 1978. You can view scans of the entire booklet here.




2.2.13


I found my old copy of Children of Albion because I wanted to read some poems by Anselm Hollo, the Finnish poet who lived most of his life in the USA. He died a few days ago on 29th January. I first read his poems in the anthology in 1969 and I liked them a lot. Around that time I bought a copy of Maya, a collection of his poems from 1959 -1969 (published by Cape Goliard Press). Although I've culled my poetry books many times in the last few decades I have kept these two books. And of course, through the years, I've continued to read Anselm Hollo's work.

                       Anselm Hollo, on the cover of 'Maya', 1970


WELL IT HAS BEEN A PLEASURE ENGLAND

Well it has been a great old
Party the first one said starting
On down the stairs a
Great gettogether the second
One joining in all the others
Pushing out into the stair-
Case following them
On down talking and
Singing and laughing like
Mad supporting each
Other stopping to pick up
This and that on the way
Down the stairs a great
Great long party winding on
Down a merry old dragon of
Chinamen retelling itself
What jokes writing them
Down on the walls for those
Who came after stumbling
And hopping on down so pleased
No one noticed they must've
Been going on down for at
Least a month and well
                       below
                            street-
                                   level

(Anselm Hollo from & it is a song, Migrant Press, 1965) 

Inside Children of Albion I found a bookmark - an entry ticket to a psychedelic theatre revue in Brisbane called High On A Hot Banana. As the back of the ticket indicates, I went to the performance on August 5th at 8pm. This was in 1967. For a moment, that teenage era came back to me quite vividly.


                                VALE ANSELM HOLLO 1934 - 2013



24.1.13


Maged Zaher's latest collection Thank You for the Window Office was recently published by Brooklyn-based Ugly Duckling Presse.

Maged is from Cairo and is currently living in Seattle. This book consolidates his distinctive poetry and furthers his three earlier titles. There is a fresh, nearly-aphoristic tone. The lines give the impression of effortless arrangement. Maged uses just the right amounts of scepticism, enquiry, humour, politics, relational aesthetic, desire and reflection. The cover image is complicated. The poems embody a cultural critique that's open and modest even when it's very smart. Here are a few sample poems (random selections, not in sequence)-

    Hello roller coaster
    Hello soup du jour precious feelings
    Here we do sales
    There they do shopping
    In the resurrection's parade
    I took a different name
    Which was an inevitable twist to the plot
    Yet someone in the organization had to ask:
    "Is people management an essential skill?"
    The bohemian is still alive

              :::


    The poet at the soccer game
    Reciting from Homer's Twitter feed
    Tires everywhere
    Piles of used Xboxes
    The bearded folks surrounding the entrance
    One of us will get to be the boss
    And feel the joys of the class system
    Monsters have a different value system
    One will die of fear
    And although the guru said nothing about jerking off
    I will manage to wear green
    And offend no one today

              :::


    They stare at blue lines
    And sell media to everyone
    Bikes are here to stay
    Some agitation is needed
    Because some poems are deeply Maoist
    Mistrust goes a long way
    I need to list all the patents we hold
    Give me value or give me death

              :::

You can find more praise, another sample,
and information about the book here
Read Los Angeles Times' Book Critic, David Ulin's review here




21.1.13



      A few places - last week in Melbourne - click here


26.12.12





                        Washing Day


23.12.12


                                                         The Mutts


21.12.12


new zealand electronic poetry centre presents -

Announcing the launch of completed SHORT TAKES ON LONG POEMS, (click the title), featuring videos of readings and presentations from nzepc symposium held at Old Government House, Auckland on 29-30 March 2012, and complete materials for American poet Rachel Blau DuPlessis' visit to the University of Auckland, February-March 2012.
              
  • Rachel Blau DuPlessis in New Zealand
  •             
  • Symposium programme and abstracts
  •             
  • LOUNGE 34: videos of 11 Australian, New Zealand and American poets
  •             
  • SHORT TAKES: 21 video presentations from the symposium
  •             
  • Oneroa Long Beach Walk Poem: symposium collaboration on Waiheke Island
  •             
  • Gallery: a selection of photos by many hands

  •             Tapa in Old Government House, (photo by Susan Schultz, March 2012)


    17.11.12

    The fifth and final instalment of Fifty-one Contemporary Poets from Australia is now published here in Jacket2 magazine. It includes poetry by Justin Clemens, Bonny Cassidy, Michelle Cahill, Michael Brennan, Ken Bolton, Judith Bishop, Louis Armand, Chris Andrews, Elizabeth Allen, Ali Alizadeh and Adam Aitken, along with artwork by Louis Armand and Ken Bolton.



    10.11.12


    November Poetry at Sappho's


    Toby Fitch presents November-Poetry-Night :

    Jill Jones' new book - Ash is Here, So are Stars
    (launch talk by Pam Brown)
    plus
    Keri Glastonbury (Grit Salute)
    Eddie Hopely (Rude Door)
    & open mic

    Tuesday 13th November
    19:00 until 22:00
    Sappho's Wine Bar/Cafe courtyard
    51 Glebe Point Rd
    Glebe
    Sydney




    9.11.12


    Lee Salomone—altre voci / other voices—Australian Experimental Art Foundation, September 21st—October 20th; Jeffrey Smart—Master Of Stillness: painting—1940—2011—Samstag Museum, October 12th— December 14th ; Katie Barber—Perceivable (painted) Objects—Sam Howie—Apainting— jointly at Felt Space, October 3rd—October 20th; Mark Valenzuela—Entry—Nexus, September 27th—October 26th; Pat Brassington—at Greenaway Gallery, September 19th—October 21st; Jeffrey Harris—My Father’s Table—Light Square Gallery, October 10th —November 1st; Matthew Bradley—Space Chickens help me make Apple pie—Fontanelle, September 23rd—October 28th;

    Ken Bolton's latest form guide is now online here.

    Who is Ken Bolton? Click here to find out.



    5.11.12


    Ken Whisson - As if


    A brilliant, extensive retrospective
    at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney
    Curated by Glenn Barkley (MCA)
    and Lesley Harding (Heide Museum of Modern Art).

    Read art critic John McDonald's review -
    Outside of the awful mainstream

                      Imaginary America, 1974-75


    Glenn Barkley, curator's floor talk
    Thursday 8th November 6.30pm - info here.

    For more information visit the MCA link

                      Books and Landscapes 1987-94



    25.10.12


    New Zealand artist & poet Greg O'Brien presents
    Conversation with Rosemary Dobson on Raoul Island
    a suite of drawings in memory of poet Rosemary Dobson

    At Slot Gallery
    38 Botany Rd
    Alexandria
    Sydney

    Until November 17

    Gallery information - click here



    6.10.12


    Dear visitors to the deletions -
    I'll be posting over at the Southerly blog throughout October.
    The first one is here.
    Week two - click here.
    Week three - click here
    Final post - week four - click here.

    Thanks for the space Southerly editors.



    17.9.12


    AVANT GAGA #4 - a night of experimental...

    October’s poetry night at Sappho’s will see the 4th instalment of ‘Avant Gaga’ — a gala night of experimental poetry — this time with special guests Pam Brown, Ken Bolton (Adelaide), and Amanda Stewart, and hosted by Toby Fitch.

    PAM BROWN
    Pam Brown has been around the Sydney poetry realm for a long time. She recently edited 'Fifty-one contemporary poets from Australia' for 'Jacket2' where she is an associate editor. She has published many books including, this year, a pocket book of ten poems, 'Anyworld', from Flying Island Books and a booklet, 'More than a feuilleton', from Little Esther Books. A longer collection of poems, 'Home by Dark', will be published by Shearsman Books in the U.K. in 2013. In a parallel life Pam lives in the bustling town of Asbestos in South-Eastern Québec; in real life she lives two suburbs away, as-the-mynah-bird-flies, in Alexandria.
    http://thedeletions.blogspot.com.au/

    KEN BOLTON
    A gay, light-hearted bastard, Ken Bolton cuts a moodily romantic figure within the dun Australian literary landscape, his name inevitably conjuring perhaps that best known image of him, bow-tie askew, lipstick-smeared, grinning cheerfully, at the wheel of his 1958 Jaguar D-type, 'El Cid'. Born in Sydney in 1949 he works at the Australian Experimental Art Foundation in Adelaide and edits Little Esther books. He has published a good deal of art criticism, some of it collected in Art Writing (Contemporary Art Centre of South Australia). He edited 'Homage To John Forbes', the book on Kurt Brereton, 'More Is Plenty', and wrote the monograph 'Michelle Nikou'. He edited the magazines 'Magic Sam' and 'Otis Rush' and has published numerous books of poetry. Wakefield Press published 'The Circus' in 2010 and Vagabond Press 'A Whistled Bit Of Bop'. Earlier titles include 'At The Flash And At The Baci' and 'Untimely Meditations'.
    http://www.eaf.asn.au/kenbolton.html

    AMANDA STEWART
    Amanda Stewart is a poet, writer and vocal artist. Much of her work is informed by ideas from linguistics, philosophy and science. She has created a diverse range of publications, performances, radio and visual works, locally and internationally, over many years. During the 1980’s and 90’s she worked full-time as a radio producer at the ABC and since then has worked freelance as a writer and performer in literature, music, theatre and new media contexts. She is a cofounder of the Australian text-sound ensemble 'Machine For Making Sense' and the Netherlands trio, Allos. Her Book and CD set of selected poems 'I/T' is available from splitrec.
    http://www.splitrec.com/

    OPEN MIC
    To read your work in the open mic reading, just turn up on the night and put your name on the list. 2 minutes each so we can fit everyone in. And, because ‘Avant Gaga’ is a particularly playful night, why not muck around with your poem — swap the lines around, turn it upside-down, change every verb, read it into a computer translator and have it spat back out — experiment with it and see what happens; you might even like your poem better than before.

    FOOD & WINE
    The wine and tapas bar will be open so you can have a meal and glass of wine while you're there if you fancy it. The Soup season at Sappho’s is over, but it’s Spring, so get your vernalagia on ...

    TUESDAY OCTOBER 9TH
    Starts at 7.00 pm in the back courtyard/garden at Sappho's.
    51 Glebe Point Road, Glebe
    Sydney
    Phone: 9552 4498
    Look forward to seeing you there.



    15.9.12



                                                                Instructional Drawing, 2012 by Erwin Wurm


    10.9.12



    Looking east, looking in.

    In Brisbane recently I listened to poets, novelists and publishers from Oceania. From countries that have experienced colonisation by France and a Maori novelist, obviously from Aeotearoa/New Zealand. The main question was largely about writing in French, in local languages, and the experience of translation in a post-colonial era.

    Having been involved in several Trans-Tasman poetry symposiums that aimed to make a bridge between poets from Australia and Aeotearoa/NZ (and, this year, with Hawai'i and China as well) I know some of the difficulties of distance and disconnect that exist in the South Pacific region. In Brisbane novelist Witi Ihimaera suggested that instead of looking north (to Europe, USA etc) Australians could concern themselves with looking east. I think he made a good point. And in ensuing discussion the suggestion was made that we also look to the interior towards the indigenous Aboriginal people. It was a welcome reminder. The Pacific Islands Forum exchanges ideas, funding etc at an international government level and met recently in the Cook Islands. The Festival of Pacific Arts was held in July this year in the Solomon Islands. I've visited and attempted to explore some aspects of the cultures of Nouvelle Caledonie, Aeotearoa and two of the Mascarene islands to the west of Australia as well, across the Indian Ocean to La Réunion and Mauritius. Looking west.

    The topic in Brisbane generally veered towards French-language writing and the identity of, say, a Kanak writer in relation to that. Someone remarked that Australian, Vanuatuan, Pakeha (etc) writers don't describe themselves as 'British-Australian' writers and neither do writers from the "French" Pacific think of themselves as 'French-Tahitian' or 'French-Kanak' (etc) writers.

    The talks were at the new State Library and the Gallery of Modern Art in Brisbane right next door to the Queensland Art Gallery where there was an exhibition of portraits from the Prado Museum in Madrid. The entrance to the Gallery has a hologram of part of the Prado - it kind of cried out for a pose. I took a few photos - you can find them here.

    If you're interested in reading work by some of the authors in the photos, one of the publishers is 'Au Vent Des Iles' and the web site is here.

            :        :        :        :    :        :        :        :

    In the September issue of Art Monthly, Susan Cochrane, author of Art and Life in Melanesia has written an extensive illustrated report on this year's Festival of Pacific Arts. She notes, towards the end of the article : "As far as mainstream Australia and its art aficionados are concerned (with a few exceptions), the Festival of Pacific Arts, the world's largest indigenous arts festival celebrating the cultural life of our Pacific neighbours, slips right under their radar. It does not even raise a blip."

    Currently, Australians mainly know about the Pacific politically, as a 'Pacific Solution' - somewhere for the Federal Government to place hundreds of refugees in the hope of discouraging their arrival by fishing boat in our country. They are to be kept, awaiting 'processing', on what is continually referred to as the 'remote' island of Nauru, in Micronesia, and on Melanesian Manus Island in the Asian Pacific just north of Papua New Guinea.