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Lucas County will name its first poet laureate

Nov 30, 2007 Toledo Free Press story :

County Commissioner Ben Konop sees the City of Toledo as poetry in motion. Konop recently started making plans to name Lucas County's first-ever poet laureate. Konop met with a committee that included published poet Nick Muska, University of Toledo professor Timothy Geiger and county staff members.

Konop said :

"This project has been in the planning stages for a little over a year now — Lucas County needs its own poet that we can be proud of, who speaks for the people of our community. It's hoped the poet laureate would expose the community at large to poetry, and show Toledo to be a progressive city that promotes the arts both for their core value and as a means to attract and keep young people here."

Shouldn't it be: "Show Lucas County to be a progressive county that promotes the arts ..."

Or is this a county initiative meant to only promote Toledo?


More from the TFP story :

Some of the laureate's proposed duties would include opening public ceremonies such as the opening of the new Downtown arena, as well as offering public readings and workshops through the University of Toledo and the Toledo-Lucas County Public Library system. According to Konop's current plan, the position would be honorary, and as a result unpaid. The laureate's term would run for two years, and he or she would be chosen by a committee picked by the county commissioners office.

The county hopes to announce its choice for the position by the end of December, and is proposing a large-scale celebration/exhibit of the laureate's works by April in honor of national poetry month.

A number of possible candidates have been talked about for the position, including university professors and seasoned published writers, though no definite choice has been made about who will be the first to be appointed to the post. While a number of nationally known poets have been discussed, Konop said he fully intends on picking a local writer as a means of promoting community pride.


Spoken-word Scene

This area has a good spoken-word scene. Poetry was on display again at this past September's Artomatic 419 event.

I used to run a Web site called ToledoArts.com. Here's a copy of that site's home page from June 2004 that I kept for some reason. One post on that page points to a Feb 22, 2004 Toledo Blade story titled Poetry in motion: The spoken word of creativity is still a vibrant art form locally. Some excerpts from a good article :

The tradition of poets from Robert Frost to The Last Poets is being kept alive in the Toledo area by a new generation hungry for expression. "There's a revival in Toledo of the arts, a mini-Renaissance," said poet Melanie Dusseau, 31, an instructor at the University of Toledo of creative writing and composition. And at its forefront are poetry and spoken word presentations.

On at least three or four days a week in Toledo and the Bowling Green area, poets can be heard during invitationals or at open mike sets in a variety of venues ranging from coffeehouses, jazz clubs, Greek restaurants, wine shops, university classrooms, and in art museums and galleries.

"You don't have to be a poet to write poetry. The expression is out there and there are now venues that are making it thrive ... that creates a culture," said poet Michael Hayes, 25, who in 1999, with six other poets became The Renaissance, a group of young people who performed on Tuesday evenings at a downtown nightspot, Murphy's Place.

Dusseau, who often writes poetry about relationships, humor, and the poetic nature of the industrial scenery of her hometown Toledo, said the importance of poetry is great, especially for writers. She incorporates an "open mike" at the close of each of her classes for students to express themselves about any topic.

Poet R.E. Braziel, 37, said he is not surprised by what he calls the Toledo area's "poetic renaissance. "Now that there are venues like Mano's and Maxwell's [Brew], you have a bunch of people with something to say and there are a lot of good poets, whether you have a couple of lines written down or a rhyme scheme or not, it doesn't have to be technically perfect," said Braziel, an employee at Owens Community College.

Braziel, known in poetry sets for his poems "Manifest Destiny" and "America's Nightmare," often conducts invitationals and youth poetry workshops under the title The Inner City Inkwell. He and poet Chareese Whitaker, 28, whose stage name is "Rhapsodi," perform together locally and across the region as the duo VerbaLibation. Whitaker, who describes herself as a "raging Christian," said she often infuses singing and issues surrounding her faith and love in her poetry. Even though her stage name is Rhapsodi, other poets often refer to her as "The Love Poet."


In that February 2004 ToledoArts.com posting, I listed some local venues that held open-mic/poetry readings :

Maxwell's Coffeehouse, every Tuesday night, 8:00 p.m.

Brewed Awakenings, every other Monday night, 8:00 p.m.

Mano's Greek Restaurant, every Thursday, 8:00 p.m.

The Original Sub Shop and Deli, readers and an open mic on the 3rd Saturday of the month.

It's All Good Jahva House on Adams street used to have open mic on Friday nights, but the coffeehouse closed this winter.

I think the coffee shops still hold spoken-word nights, but an updated list for the area needs to be created.

Metroparks

Here was a recent Metroparks event called Open MIC Youth Sessions :

Manor House, 6 to 8 p.m. The Metroparks of the Toledo Area, Jamil Lewis Multicultural Center for tha Arts, and Human Values for Tranformation Action will sponsor the "Metroparks Open MIC Youth Sessions" to highlight youth ages 14-21 years. The event will provide a creative outlet for talents in music, poetry, improvisation, drumming and dance. The event will be held on Sunday evenings scheduled for October 28, November 11 and November 18, 2007 from (6:00 - 8:00 pm) in the Manor House located in the Wildwood Preserve. Fee: Free

CAC

The Collingwood Arts Center hosts Open Mic Tuesdays :

Tuesday Nights at the CAC: Poetry, acoustic performance, whatever.....ages 16 to > 80. Refreshments are served. $1 donation requested. 8:30 pm - 11:30 pm.

Hylife

Hylife Media :

Hylife Media is a Media group in Toledo, Ohio composed of two artists: Imani Lateef and Sara City Lopez. Their goal is to put together events of artistic origins.

Hylife Media Group puts together events of all kinds including jazz, hip hop, spoken word, funk, soul and reggae. You looking for art? You have come to the right people! Their first event: The Tipping Point was a success; bringing together slam poetry and hip hop into one night to celebrate the who's who's of wordsmith in Toledo, OHio.

The group hosts an open mic POETRY venue every TUESDAY at The Club Prestige in Downtown Toledo right next to the Amtrack station from 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM. You can come out and here the dopest poets of Ohio and surrounding areas, and you can express yourself and share your own art with people who appreciate it. Get there on time, the list will fill up quickly.

Madd Poets Society

About the Madd Poets Society :

The mission of the Madd Poets Society is to empower the development of citizens and individuals. The organization actively facilitates learning through service, preservation, discovery, synthesis and the dissemination of knowledge while fostering an inclusive, culturally diverse environment.

The goal of Madd Poets Society's Youth Program is to expose at-risk teens to a positive and well-rounded environment. Through the gift of self-expression and the appreciation of the cultural arts, participants are encouraged to embrace the possibilities of one's self-worth and challenged to succeed. Knowing that today's youth have long been immersed in hip-hop culture, the elements of poetry, rap and song are utilized as learning tools. With the benefits of long-term mentoring and working in small groups, students are introduced to a vast support system designed to enhance social development and creativity.


Etc.

Contests

Every year, the Toledo City Paper hosts a poetry and fiction contest. The 2007 winners.

TV for local writers

On that old ToledoArts.com home page from 2004 was a posting about an initiative by local author Warren Woodberry who I've enjoyed meeting in the past. From the May 2004 Toledo City Paper article :

Author Warren Woodberry has a plan to get local writers on TV

They all have latched onto the hopes that Warren Woodberry, author of "For We Are Strangers," will bring to life his idea for a local TV book-review talk show. His letters to area newspapers spawned dozens of responses from local writers in need of a medium for promotion and discussion in this city, a place Woodberry says is often stalled in its goal to become a "cultural icon."

"The city wants to promote arts and culture, but there seems to be a disconnect here," Woodberry said. "Here are people that are talented enough to write a book and they’re from the city. If the city needs to become a cultural icon, it needs to recognize its talented people."

He had seen enough national authors philosophizing about their writing on shows like “Oprah” or C-Span’s "Booknotes," ending up with soaring book sales. He decided locals needed some TV time and, after formulating a plan for a six-week pilot, walked into Thackeray’s Books at 3301 W. Central Ave., with the hope Chris Champion, the store’s public relations director, would agree — and he did.

"I thought it would absolutely work right away," Champion said. "I have probably 150 authors that I carry on consignment — local, self-published authors. These are authors that don’t get another opportunity, don’t get another venue to merchandise their material."

With plans for a union between local talent and television under way, Woodberry has begun to present his plan for a one-hour forum for authors, playwrights, poets, journalists and English professors who have all shown a "willingness to be on this show" to possible pilot sponsors.

If the letters are any indication, the literary talent around town seems to have latched on to the concept. With Woodberry’s talk-show-host candor, Toledo’s pending "elegant city" status could be found on the airwaves of public television. "It’s not just about putting people on television to talk about their work," Woodberry explains, "but also encouraging the talent and increasing pride (and job prospects) in the city."

"There is talent here in this city from all colors, all creeds, all age groups," Woodberry said. He is most enthusiastic about the city’s "potential." He emphasizes this when he leans forward in his chair, sits up to say it and attach it to the future "holy Toledo renaissance."

With consultants coming and going through Toledo to tell people that these capabilities of the arts exist, Woodberry is craving the flavor and knowledge only locals can provide. " Sometimes," he begins, leaning forward again to let me in on another truth, "what you need is right at your doorstep."

Holy Toledo Creative Class

HTCC was started back in 2004 by Warren Woodberry and Steve Athanas, the former Arts & Entertainment Editor for the Toledo City Paper.

From a September 2004 Toledo Talk posting :

Artists and fans of the arts meet every Thursday from 6:00 - 8:30 p.m. at Jackson's Grill and Lounge downtown at 233 N. Huron St. "A night when the creative juices of the city flows from the pens of area authors, playwrights, filmmakers, journalists, and poets. A night of fact and fiction, romance and mystery, debate and discussion." It's free. It's a chance for area artists to promote their work, to network, and discuss arts-related issues in Toledo.

I attended several of these gatherings and listened to local poets read their published work. One of the local poets I met was A. S. Dodge who read from his book A Place to Call Home.

Does a directory exist that lists all the local, published writers?

created by jr on Nov 30, 2007 at 10:31:00 am
updated by jr on Nov 30, 2007 at 11:55:25 am
    Comments: 10

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tags: art   politics   

Related articles
Lucas County arts loan program - Jul 24, 2007
Live Work Create Toledo - Nov 30, 2007
Toledo Arts Zone - Nov 30, 2007

Comments ... #

"Does a directory exist that lists all the local, published writers?"

At the Library! Not sure if it's a directory, but they do catalog Toledo-area authors, past and present.

posted by MaggieThurber on Nov 30, 2007 at 12:18:24 pm     #



Great amount of material JR...

As usually my eyes gloss over after about the second page and I quit reading it...

posted by SensorG on Nov 30, 2007 at 12:23:23 pm     #



There once was a town named Toledo,
Who's budget they did quite exeed-o
They billed for paths for their bikes,
And flowers and lights,
So the people moved out with great speed-o.

posted by billy on Nov 30, 2007 at 01:46:57 pm     #



I owe you a drink for that one, billy.

posted by GuestZero on Nov 30, 2007 at 09:42:37 pm     #



It was in the paper today that Joel Lipman, a UT professor will be given the title. That is a good choice, he is very well repected in literary circles and at the university.

Congratulations Prof. Lipman.

posted by MaumeeMom on Dec 01, 2007 at 12:00:46 pm     #



yes, Congrats to Prof. Lipman!

posted by MaggieThurber on Dec 02, 2007 at 01:56:52 pm     #



I think the one statement form Konop pretty much says it all...he is more focused on the City of Toledo than the County as a whole. Personally they need to rewrite the requirements for county commissioner. Based on the population of Lucas County and cities within...2 seats should go to residents from within Toledo, the other seat should be reserved for someone who resides outside of Toledo limits.

It is amazing how cities on the decline are always out trying to get awards such as All American City, Most Livable, or create other pointless things. They are nothing but false hopes to try to boost civic pride and get attention. Unfortunately when you look at cities in the South and Southwest that are growing, they aren't wasting their time with these stupid contests. They get down to basics...keep their city kept up, roads fixed, taxes low, and have a friendly approaching in welcoming businesses of all sorts.

Until Toledo and the surrounding area learn to get rid of these worthless political heads, John Robinson Block, and open their eyes to businesses not related to a union....then the area will continue to die.

I just spent a few days visiting up there, last trip was 2 years ago. Needless to say, I just shake my head at what little process is made. I think the biggest problem is people keep electing morons like Carty, Konop, and others that are more worried about their air time on the news or how many stories in the Blade they can get. Here? My city has 110,000 people in it...the mayor? Never on the news. Oklahoma City...the mayor is on the news for major city project announcements, things related to the NBA, or new businesses coming in. You NEVER see him on the news for any of the petty things you see Carty on for.

I could go on about the rest of my frustrations with that town...but unfortunately it won't do any good.

posted by JustaSooner on Dec 09, 2007 at 06:03:05 pm     #



WSPD audio of Joel Lipman accepting the role as Lucas County poet laureate.


Some of Joel Lipman's books of poetry :

  • Mercury Vapor Lamp
  • Chicago You Got A Wide Stance
  • Provocateur
  • Machete Chemistry/Panades Physics
  • The Real Ideal


April 2007 exhibition: Joel Lipman: Origins of Poetry - Stamp Art, PoeMvelopes, & Visual Poems

Joel Lipman is a native of Kenosha and graduate of UW-Madison. He is professor of Art and English at the University of Toledo. Represented in the anthology Writing To Be Seen [Core, Light & Dust, 2001], his visual poems were exhibited in 2002 and 2003 at the New York Center for the Book and the Minnesota Center for Book Arts. Long active as a mail artist and a five-time recipient of Ohio Arts Council Individual Artist Fellowships in Poetry, an on-line portfolio of his work can be found at Light and Dust Poets.


poeMvelopes :

An art object consisting of a visual poem applied by Joel Lipman to the back of an envelope via rubberstamping and usually distributed as a piece of mail art; sobrepoema (Spanish). (And these poeMvelopes are wonders in small packages. Joel is one of the masters of modern rubberstamping art, and he can squeeze onto the back of a tiny envelope (size 6 or 6 ¾) amazing little visual poems: tiny narratives, concrete poems, visual pwoermds, semi- abstract wordart, miniature placard poems.)


Samples of Joel Lipman's visual work :


Essay: Stamp Artist Joel Lipman

Excerpts from a lengthy essay of Joel Lipman's own words about his art.

Since 1976, my focus has been on a range of visual and spatial poetries with differing and shared concerns.

Active as a mail artist in the dynamic worldwide network, around 1976, while living on North Lincoln Avenue in Chicago, I coined the word poeMvelope. Behind the term was the concept of rubberstamping poems on the flap side of envelopes to make what was a functional physical object, mailable internationally, impressionistic, often lyrical of language, kinetic in arrangement and composition, poetic in lexical cosmology.

And, quite specifically, I developed poeMvelopes out of practical need, having moved several times over a few years. In this pre-email era, I preferred to stay in contact with my network of friends, poets and editors by correspondence as opposed to telephone. I wrote many letters, not infrequently a dozen or more a day, and many of my letters included (and were frequently built around) poems�drafts seeking feedback, submissions, editorial exchange, and letterpoems to friends who were practicing poets and writers.

These poeMvelopes were quickly made on a laptop easel while on a mail art drive through northwest Ohio in 1983. I packed a compact car kit of rubberstamp type and forms, several inkpads, envelopes, postcards and postage. My spouse, Cynthia, drove. I kept notes and stamped, keeping my senses and imagination alert to opportunities and images as we stopped in the agricultural region's towns and along rural roads. I'd do a set of four, the number of envelopes I could fit on the board while retaining room for a few rubberstamp letters and an ink pad or two. As we came to post offices in the various communities I'd mail off fresh pieces to regular correspondents, mail artists and upcoming exhibitions.

Writing poems is habitual activity, its requisite tools little but notebook and pen, and I always have both in my pocket or pack. The typographic spatialities have become gestural and almost go unscripted in my notebooks, with breaks, white fields, lateral and vertical pauses and alignments generally adjusted at the drafting table, typewriter or computer, all of which I use along with pencil and pen. Though I briefly flirted with one, I do not compose using a laptop. Elsewhere than in office or studio I write by hand and use the arguably obsolete or inefficient technologies of handwriting. The pleasures of mark and smudge and the shaky legibilities of my hasty cursive are more gratifying to compose than the crisp registrations of keyboard and printer.

I'd long been buying old books at estate sales and resale shops, not as a bibliophile or collector, but to disassemble, cut-up and subsequently print on with rubberstamps. I'd locate interesting aspects of the page or elements of story that in different ways inspired me. Having long made poeMvelopes, I'd developed my interest in micro-narratives where one might suggest a story in a few words, and I increasingly explored the intimate suggestiveness of color and fragmentary or visually altered language.

Some of the long-term projects I've engaged are the open- ended and unbound folios "The Origins of Poetry," "Gibberish Entrees" and the political satire "Jesse Helms' Body." The Helms series began during the Reagan-era culture wars when the National Endowment for the Arts was the Senator's constant chosen target. Derived from medical textbook illustrations and anatomical cutaway drawings, "Jesse Helms' Body" begins with the premise "�that upon his death, Jesse Helms' body is donated to art." The work has been quite widely, but not inclusively, published. A San Francisco exhibition in 1995 at Bill Gaglioni's Stamp Art Gallery displayed the thirty-four pieces I'd at that time completed. Gagliloni published an illustrated catalogue of the exhibition.

Visual poetry is an ancient and powerful language act practiced since prehistory. The marks of antiquity articulate with a luminous power that continues through the work of history's anonymous and named practitioners. The texts and designs of tomorrow's poets will carry this long and articulate tradition into the future.

posted by jr on Dec 12, 2007 at 10:35:19 am     #



This is one that definitely goes into the who really cares file. This position does nothing for turning a failing area around. It is about as meaningful as posting All America City or Most insert here City. Businesses and residents a like aren't going to make a decision to commit themselves to Toledo/Lucas County because of this.

posted by JustaSooner on Dec 14, 2007 at 05:50:45 pm     #



Mar 24, 2008 Tell Toledo posting titled Open Public Conversations With Poet Laureate Joel Lipman

Lipman plans to serve as a Poet-In-Residence at Main Library, 325 Michigan St., downtown Toledo, for the duration of his two-year appointment as the County’s Poet Laureate. During his residency, Lipman will hold Open Public Conversations with the Poet Laureate, whereby poets and writers can drop in during scheduled office hours in Main’s Humanities department.

“The hours are times when citizens can drop in and discuss poetry, their own poems, questions regarding community writing groups or other matters regarding the art of poetry. I’ll look forward to these conversational hours,” said Lipman.

Lipman’s Open Public Conversations serve as one segment of his residency and partnership with the Library. He also plans to coordinate a host of poetry-related events such as a film series, an exhibit and conduct workshops with junior high and high school students at various schools throughout Lucas County. He will also work with adults.

“I view this partnership as an extraordinary opportunity for Mr. Lipman to expose and enhance the rich and vital poetry scene in Lucas County,” said Clyde Scoles, Library Director.

Lipman’s current office hours are scheduled on Monday and Thursday afternoons now through April 28. Lipman will then break in the summer to teach at the Waterfall Arts Center in Maine, and resume his Library residency in the Fall. New office hours will be posted at that time.

Lipman’s scheduled office hours at Main Library (Humanities dept.) are as follows:

Monday, April 14: 2-5 p.m.
Thursday, April 17: 1-4 p.m.
Monday, April 21: 1-4 p.m.
Thursday, April 24: 1-4 p.m.
Monday, April 28: 2-5 p.m.


Lucas County Library event

Join the Toledo-Lucas County Public Library as we celebrate “Poetry Live & Out Loud @ Your Library,” an exciting evening of poetry and spoken word scheduled from 7-8:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 22 in the Huntington Meeting Room at Main Library, 325 Michigan St.

Lucas County Poet Laureate Joel Lipman, a poet-in-residence at Main Library, is scheduled to appear and participate in this exciting free program.

Join us to hear some of the area’s most talented poets and spoken word artists for this lively night of open-microphone style poetry. Poets will register in advance for a maximum five-minute performance slot.

If you are interested in sharing a few of your poems with the audience, sign up now to register and reserve your time to wax poetic on the microphone. Space is limited, so register today!

Lewd lyrics, profanity, or strong sexual content are not allowed during poetry performances at the Library.

posted by jr on Apr 10, 2008 at 02:16:49 pm     #