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    Jazz in August...Charlie Parker Festival -- concerts, art, readings and more! Stay tuned for details; sign up on our mailing list. (see contacts for more information)
  • Tribes and The Aquarian Arts Announce Poetry Contest

    Enter soon! Deadline is July 1st.
    A Gathering of the Tribes and The Aquarian Arts are co-sponsoring a poetry contest.

    First prize will be $150 dollars. Second: $75, Third: $50. Deadline is July 1st. Send up to 3 poems (include SASE) Deadline is July 1st. Send entries to The Aquarian Arts, 502 Plandome Road, Manhasset, NY, 11030

    Finalist Judge will be Yerra Sugarman who received the 2005 PEN/Joyce Osterweil Award for Poetry for her first book, Forms of Gone, published in 2002. Her second book, The Bag of Broken Glass, was published in January 2008, also by Sheep Meadow Press. She is the recipient of a “Discovery”/The Nation Poetry Prize, a Chicago Literary Award, the Poetry Society of America’s George Bogin Memorial Award and its Cecil Hemley Memorial Award. Born in Toronto, she lives in New York City, where she has taught creative writing in undergraduate and MFA programs. She is currently teaching poetry at Rutgers University and is Writer in Residence at Eugene Lang College - The New School for Liberal Arts.

  • Izm(link)


    June 19, 2008-July 31, 2008
    Venue: Tribes Gallery
    Address: 285 East Third Street, 2nd Floor, New York, NY 10009

    Works by HiCoup
    Curated by Justina Mejias

    Opening reception 6-9pm, Thurs. June 19, 2008

    Racism. Sexism. Alcoholism. Hedonism. Opportunism. Nationalism…

    Deconstructing the different “isms” that pervade society, hip-hop emcee and visual artist HiCoup (Haiku) presents a mixed media abstract impressionist rendering of the societal influences that bombard us since conception in the womb.

    “Izm” is an artistic exploration of the landscape of humanity through it’s conditioning both conscious and subconscious.


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Recently Published by Tribes/ Fly-By-Night Press

Lester Aflick ‘I Dream About You Baby’

poem-idreamaboutyou.jpg

Fly By Night Press is proud to announce the publication of I Dream About You Baby, poems by Lester Afflick.

Book release Party July 19th 2008 4-5:30 pm @ The Bowery Poetry Club- Readers TBA


“Love Does Not Make Me Gentle or Kind”

love does not

 

From Fly by Night Press
Chavisa Woods

“Love Does Not Make Me Gentle or Kind”

$14.95 195 pages available for order on amazon.com and at any Bookstore in the U.S.A.



Latest Reviews

Cai Guo-Qiang Retrospective at the Guggenheim Review and Interview by Robyn Hillman-Harrigan

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Visionary, rabble-rouser, contemporary artist, Cai Guo-Qiang is the first Chinese artist to have a major retrospective at New York’s Guggenheim Museum. In his artist’s toolbox are explosives, gunpowder, yak skin, live snakes, wooden arrows, real cars, life-like replicas of tigers and wolfs, and trenched up sunken ships. Witness the spectacle created by this modern day alchemist[…]


Patricia Spears Jones’ Femme Du Monde Review by Soraya Shalforoosh

Patricia Spears Jones’ second collection Femme du Monde is a passport into the soul of a sophisticated lady, a rich and engaging interior voice that explains her journey inward, outward.
We embark on Patricia Spears Jones’s journey at a place physically and metaphorically called “Hope,” Arkansas. The young college student with her mates on their […]


RICHARD PRINCE at the GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM by Emil Memon

richard20prince2.jpg
Richard Prince one man show at Guggenheim is a massive affair. The show consists of different cycles of artists work, his famous cowboys, biker chicks, car hoods sculptures, nurse paintings,DeKooning paintings, check paintings, black and white; color paintings, celebrity publicity assemblages etc…. Walking up the spiral of Guggeneheim in a chronological order you immerse yourself into his world, which supposed to be a pure concentration of American pop culture[…]


Review of the Conceicao Evaristo’s Brazilian novel “Poncia Vicencio” by Thatiana Santos

BOOK REVIEW (Portuguese)

O romance afro-brasileiro relata a história da infância e vida adulta de Ponciá Vicêncio, menina pobre que nasceu e cresceu em uma pequena cidade chamada Vicêncio (nome do antigo dono de terra) com seus pais e o irmão Luandi Vicêncio.


Review of Scott Hicks’ “Glass” by Tom Savage

About The Omnipresent Phillip Glass

Glass: A Portrait in Twelve Parts, a film produced and directed by Scott Hicks

This excellent documentary/interview film with and about Phillip Glass going down the Astroland roller coaster in Coney Island with a smile on his face. All those years of involvement with Buddhism and other spiritual traditions would seem to have paid off. But why subject one’s life to danger gratuitously? The question is neither asked nor answered. Glass claims not to be a Buddhist. Nevertheless he has a Buddhist teacher named Gelek Rinpoche and is on the boards of numerous Buddhist organizations including Tibet House and a magazine I get four times per year about Buddhist topics called Tricycle. The film features Chuck Close, the famous artist who paints portraits mostly in black dots that look like blown up photographs. Close has known Glass for many years[…]



Latest Poetry

(In Memory Of) Lester Afflick 10/1/00 by Bob Holman

uddling poets inside dark perfect sunday fall warm
day outside beauty we gather inside lester late the late
lester in the middle a poem that doesn’t quite start
is scratched out xxxs doesn’t quite end what you
thought what you taught what you suspired
stood for your ground some soaring rarely — cynic
died of poverty died of overdose of love […]


Poem by Lester Afflick: Pearl

Ocean on my tongue. Small boats
succoring on the gristle of ocean.
Dark brine. They’re dragging
the nets up from the sea […]



Latest Essays

The Fade of Charity: New Orleans’ Closed Hospital, Booker, and the Present’s Odd Friend–The Past by Brian Boyles

THE FADE OF CHARITY:
New Orleans’ Closed Hospital, Booker, and the Present’s Odd Friend–The Past

“Nothing being more certain than death and nothing more uncertain than its hour…”
So begins the holographic will of Jean Louis, a sailor who died in 1736 and left the seed money for the first Charity […]


Reflections on John Cage by Aaron Hayes

The first time we encounter John Cage, we think that he is somewhat interesting.  
Teaching a music appreciation class to a small group of high school students, I performed 4′33″ for them one day outside.  About 30 seconds into the first movement, one of them said, ‘oh, I get it.’  Still, I think there is […]



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Being in a Lone Space, Surbone & Ross at TRIBES

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Review of Witness This ‘Trash’: Eve Packer’s Playland: Poems 1994-2004 by Brynn Saito

Witness This ‘Trash’: Eve Packer’s Playland: Poems 1994-2004

by Brynn Saito


Yes, trash—but not in the pejorative. By “trash” I mean what Eve means: that “glitter- / soaked rain- / wet orange / day-glo” stuff of stretch marks, pebbles and rainstorms, not “garbage,” for, according to Eve Packer, “garbage is


bits of

stink broccoli.

fleas in the

litter, urine-

stained

daily news….


Someday

i’ll be garbage,

ash


for now

tag me hard-core

Trash


In Playland—Eve Packer’s second collection of poetry, published by Fly By Night Press—Packer holds NYC’s grit and excess up to the light, then makes it shine. Everything from the cotton bikini briefs of a woman working at “Lingerie” to a pick-up full of ash-covered firefighters comes under Packer’s poet-gaze. And that’s the city for you: schizo, dazzling, destroyed, heartbreaking. Packer’s ability—her fierce intent—to take it all in makes this a brave collection of before-and-after poetry: before the ashes, before the Disneyfication of Times Square, after a love affair, after infidelity, and after September, 2001. Naturally rhythmic, sensual, and spontaneous, one can easily see why Packer performs her work with a jazz ensemble.

Playland begins “in this grey fluorescent box of wild dreams, / schlock fantasy, backstage for the suck & fuck / school of sad and horny fish.” A section called Fantasy Booth opens the book; the poems here reference 42nd Street in the early 1990s, when Packer ventured through the doors of places like Show World and Peepworld, “intrigued, scared, and challenged” by the prospect of entering a zone constructed for the male gaze only. Packer is a watcher, too, but a compassionate one: the speaker in these poems is never voyeuristic, unless ironically and playfully so. What rises from these encounters are the voices and stories of the performers and performed-for: “i ask him / what do men want / he says freedom, freedom / & a little variety.” A poem called “peepworld (5)” begins: “what do you wish / for the new year:” A series of answers follows: “harder work… better tippers… big dicks, more sex… men treat us better….”

Packer’s voice is but a vessel for the life-sounds around her; she’s a streetwise witness whose poems deliver the immediacy of a moment without guessing at the future or dragging out the past. This position and tone work to her advantage when, in the book’s last section called window: 9/11, Packer records her experience of the days following the disaster.


2 explosions—

18 min apart:

while teaching

Ian: smoke billowing

Jet? accident?

doesn’t seem possible—

(illegible)—


Each observation is exact and situated—never general or sweeping—allowing the poem to read and feel like a document, lean in content and very precise. The reader is free to reflect on the evidence without drowning beneath rhetoric or sentimentality. Even the form accentuates the laid bare quality of the work: no capitals here, no upper case “I,” very few commas, and ampersands instead of “ands.” By this moment in the collection, we trust Packer’s voice: she’s lived this city, through both grit and shine—she’s been “cruisin’ with moxie,” contemplated shoe styles on the uptown C, and done every “filthy, nasty, sweet / thing.” She’s even posed the question “what is love” to taxi drivers, bouncers, lovers and mothers. So when we get to the poem about taking calls at St. Vincent’s Hospital, September 14, 2001, and the girl named Amaryllis who is the “first to ask / is there a list / of the dead,” we trust our writer to take us there. Packer is best when she is achingly particular with her choices; phrases like “stench of / death & / heartbreak,” bog down the clarity with abstractions. Luckily, they are few and far between.

There’s much wonder among poets these days concerning poetry about September 11. How to write into it without sounding overwrought? How to say something fresh without perpetuating newspeak or exploiting spectacle or dishonoring one’s own or another’s experience? How to find a language in the wreckage? Be like Eve: be brave and honest and tough. And listen with all of one’s senses. “i have cravings, i have desires,” says the speaker in “museum,”


to carry the colors of earth

on & in

me

& sometimes i do