TRIBES MAGAZINE ONLINE 2025
POETRY, PROSE, AND VISUAL ART.
FALL OF FREEDOM MIXTAPE,
November 21 + 22, 2005
A Gathering of the Tribes stands in solidarity with artists nationwide, answering Fall of Freedom’s call for the arts community to unite on Friday, November 21st and Saturday, November 22nd in defiance of the authoritarian forces sweeping the nation. Our democracy is under attack. Threats to free expression are rising. Dissent is being criminalized. Institutions and media are being reshaped into instruments of propaganda. And in this moment, art matters more than ever.. Click to view.
TRIBES IN CONVERSATION with DREW PISARRA,
October 8, 2025
Tribes’ Executive Director Regie Cabico sits down with poet and visual artist Drew Pisarra to talk about life, love, haigas, and his current body of work, Ice Collages. Click to view.
COME HEAR! FEATURED POETS,
May 10, 2025
A Gathering of the Tribes is honored to preserve and share poems by an incomparable cadre of poets listening and holding each other up and creating bonds to pull us through our horror hardships.
For nearly two decades, Nathaniel Siegel and I have co-curated COME HEAR! A mini marathon reading as part of The Rainbow Book Fair one of the few remaining queer book fairs in the world. LGBTQIA+ poets gather to give voice and celebrate their loves in a time when our life, liberty and pursuits of bliss are under siege.
Rainbow shout outs to Drew Pisarra, Casey Catherine Moore & Malcolm Tariq for co-curating and hosting an afternoon of camaraderie and hope. Humble gratitude to Perry Brass and Sarah Chinn and most of all, Nathaniel Siegel for his passionate vision to preserve queer literary legacy.
Regie Cabico, The Center, NYC | May 10, 2025
Click to view.
A GATHERING OF OUR PRIDE FEATURED POETS,
May 31, 2006
The poets in this collection offer love, laughter, and queer resistance in the threat of unimaginable erasures. These poets represent the activist and literary voices serving a Capital City in turmoil. Jona Colson gives us the power of hydrangeas in winter and a family bond to pull us through our cynicism. Ishanee Chanda brings the globe and its battles, inspiring us to find the home in hope, while Sunu P. Chandy brings compassion on a bus ride. Saundra Rose Maley depicts the distances between family bonds with a gut-punch ending full of pride. There’s ribald humor with Adrian Gaston Garcia’s metaphor of an Olive Garden breadstick, and Tanya Olson uses repetition to shake the domestic roles that have confined gender. Malik Thompson’s lyricism warns of the “committee of vultures” and the “bones that sparkle” in defiance of a regime.
There are love poems to make you weep and ache and say awe: Dwayne Lawson-Brown’s first taste of a rainbow, Natalie E. Illums’ physical yearning in a loyal lover’s touch of the hand, Kim Roberts’ ode to her lover’s madras shorts, and Hiram Larew reminds us we are all in this together. Michelle Parkerson summons the BIPOC voices who have always fought and held us up because a furtive glance has power, a desire so strong, we become flashes of lightning, we are gathering fire and shelter in the storm. The storm is now, and we will not be silent. As Dan Vera writes:
Holy the glimmer of recognition
in the eyes of those we sought,
who reflected back that fraction of belonging,
who spoke without words
what the heart would dare admit.
Regie Cabico, MLK Library, Washington, DC | May 31, 2025
IN CELEBRATION OF WHAT WOULD HAVE BEEN STEVE CANNON’S 90th BIRTHDAY,
APRIL 10, 2025
Click here to view works honoring our beloved founder.