Art Space, Mt. Baker Station Artist Housing

Mt. Baker Station

In what may be their best Seattle project yet, Art Space unveiled their latest plans tonight:

Artspace Mt. Baker Station Lofts, Artspace’s third project in Seattle, will be a mixed-use arts facility containing 57 rental units of affordable live/work space for artists and their families. Located adjacent to the Mt. Baker Light Rail Station, this $18 million project will be a Transit Oriented Development (TOD) consisting of three levels of live/work space. The ground floor will include a community room and 12 commercial spaces for non-profits, creative enterprises and related businesses. 

Complete with rooftop gardens with honeybees, the latest green design and quick access to downtown or SeaTac Airport, these spaces, commercial AND residential, are likely to be snapped up quickly. Kudos to Cathryn Vandenbrink for her ongoing vision and commitment to the Seattle cultural scene.

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Writing Alongside Kim Hyesoon (Living Room May 8 – 7P)

The moving dot can be extinguished in an instant, yet it contains all information, even eternity.  Try placing a dot on the undulating waves. The moment I extend my arm, the dot is already gone.
 —from the essay “In the Oxymoronic World” by Kim Hyesoon,
    translated by Don Mee Choi
 
 

Kim Hyesoon

This Tuesday at Living Room, we will write alongside one of South Korea’s most prominent contemporary women poets, Kim Hyesoon (b. 1955).  We will begin by looking at the lecture, “In the Oxymoronic World” before turning to her poetry which brims with powerful imagery, stark language, and playful innovation. Jeanne Morel is your guide.

Kim Hyesoon says of her work, “What I wrote about was cooking and my ingredient was death. I tried to turn the heaviness of oppression into something playful and light, so that what I ended up with was a type of poetry that did not appear to be political.” After a brief immersion in her words, we will write a series of experiments responding to her work and incorporating elements from it into our own writing. After that we will critique work as usual.

Writers of all ages, backgrounds and skill levels gather Tuesdays at 7P to read new work, the work of someone else or to just be in the engaging company of other writers. Your donation of $5 helps SPLAB continue our programming. Please bring 8 copies of the work you plan to read. Copies are no longer provided by SPLAB.

Living Room happens @ SPLAB in the Cultural Corner at 3651 S. Edmunds. (Look for the SPLAB sign on the wall and come inside.) We’re 2 blocks from the Columbia City Link Light Rail Station. (Parking is available on the school grounds.)

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Poets against Domestic Violence

(From Doug Johnson of Cave Moon Press)

April 30, 2012

Dear Poet:

In 2011 we produced the anthology entitled Broken Circles to benefit hunger.  The strategy was simple and it succeeded in helping local food banks from San Francisco to New York.  Poets were charged with setting up readings to help to their local food bank.  Our local efforts benefit Northwest Harvest in Yakima.  Last week the San Francisco food bank thanked our poets for their efforts.

For 2013 we’re hoping to leverage this strategy to another issue—domestic violence.

Cave Moon Press

We’re hoping that at each local level poets can interface with their YWCA or battered women’s shelter to come up with ways to help.  Our efforts will benefit those organizations. The global village of the Internet allows this strategy to become scalable.  YWCA’s all over the country are able to create their own events to fit their own local needs.

One idea is for each group to organize a “Pack your dreams” campaign.  Women in these shelters, many times, have children and are ill-equipped to survive.  People could donate backpacks with essential hygienic items and school supplies.  Hopefully, a backpack would cost around twenty dollars—, unless there is a local underwriter.  With some planning benefit concerts and readings could take place in the shelters or a “safe” environment.

One editorial decision is that each poem will be Anonymous 1, Anonymous 2 in order to protect the poets as well as illustrate the objectivication of victims. Instead of extensive biographies, there will be only a list of names. People who have survived are all at different places on the road of sharing. Safety is paramount for their healing. Some are still in danger.  Even lifting a pen for a poem feels terrifying. Some are physically safe while still chained to memories.  Some are still harassed, having their week punctuated with fear like the appearance of a garden snake in the path.  People still need to find a way to speak.

We have an agreement with our local YWCA, so publicity will reflect that fact.  Letters like this will be available for poets to take to their local YWCA. Together as poets we can look at ways to scale this to regions or the nation.  Broken Circles was just the beginning and we’re hoping that with this much notice, together, we can help even more people.

Thanks for your time.

Please place poems in MS Word with KTS_[YOUR_NAME]_043012 as the file.

Please put Keys to Silence in the message line. Include contact information in the message.

Doug Johnson

Cave Moon Press – Executive director

(The .pdf is for sharing.  It contains the same information)

043012_KTS_cover_call

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Good Haibun/Bad Haibun Mayday Living Room

Basho

We’ll celebrate Mayday by working on an ancient Japanese form that’s gained steam since Jack Kerouac and Gary Snyder started their experiments in the 50s. We’ll look at Anne Waldman and Andrew Schelling’s more contemporary approaches and Sam Hamill’s translations and thoughts on this combination of prose and poetry. A couple of bad ones will be thrown in to help you hone your critical sense. Paul Nelson is your guide. Maybe you’ll have a working class narrative or memory to work with Tuesday at 7PM at SPLAB’s Living Room.

Writers of all ages, backgrounds and skill levels gather Tuesdays at 7P to read new work, the work of someone else or to just be in the engaging company of other writers. Your donation of $5 helps SPLAB continue our programming. Please bring 8 copies of the work you plan to read. Copies are no longer provided by SPLAB.

Living Room happens @ SPLAB in the Cultural Corner at 3651 S. Edmunds. (Look for the SPLAB sign on the wall and come inside.) We’re 2 blocks from the Columbia City Link Light Rail Station. (Parking is available on the school grounds.)

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