Monday, April 16, 2012

Don Kingfisher Campbell at Bolton Hall, April 22

After the celebrations of "Passing of the Laurels" - a wonderful gathering of poets and poetry lovers at McGroarty Arts Center, and crowning Dorothy Skiles the next Poet Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga, we are happy to announce that Don Kingfisher Campbell will be the featured poet at our monthly reading on April 22, 2012 at 4:30 p.m. at Bolton Hall Museum, 10110 Commerce Ave, Tujunga.

Don Kingfisher Campbell is currently studying for an MFA in Poetry at Antioch University, Los Angeles. Mr. Campbell has taught Creative Writing for 28 years in the Occidental College Upward Bound program and has been a Guest Teacher even longer for the Los Angeles Unified School District. Kingfisher is the host of Saturday Afternoon Poetry in Pasadena, editor of the San Gabriel Valley Poetry Quarterly, and founder of POETRYpeople youth writing workshops.

Don has recently been awarded a commission by the city of Pasadena to compose a poem for the City Speaks art exhibit and also won first place in the 2011 Whittier Poetry Contest. His poetry has been published in numerous anthologies and journals, as well as widely online.

For more information see the site for San Gabriel Valley Poetry Quarterly and Don Kingfisher Campbell's personal site.

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Additional information about our "Passing the Laurels" event, Dorothy Skiles, and a photo album will be posted online after Don's feature.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

This Sunday! Passing of the Laurels Ceremony

On April 15, 2012, at 3:00 p.m. at McGroarty Arts Center in Tujunga, CA, the Sixth Poet Laureate, Maja Trochimczyk, will pass the laurel wreath to the Seventh Poet Laureate, Dorothy Skiles. The new Poet Laureate will serve for a term of two years, 2012-2014.

The ceremony will include poetry reading by Kathabela Wilson, Just Kibbe, Maja Trochimczyk, Joe DeCenzo, and the new laureate. The poets will be accompanied by musicians, guitarist, Dr. William Lenaburg and flautist Prof. Rick Wilson. The event will include group readings of poems by Maja Trochimczyk and Joe DeCenzo.

Joe DeCenzo, the Third Poet Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga will serve as the event's MC. The ceremony will also include commendations from the city, county and state officials. Reception to follow.

MAJA TROCHIMCZYK discusses her term as Poet Laureate on her blog Poetry Laurels: "As a new citizen (American for mere two years), and a resident of Sunland for just fifteen years, I was delighted to have been elected the Sixth Poet-Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga in March 2010. English is my second language, so it was quite an honor. During my “Passing of the Laurels” Ceremony in April I was wearing a silly grin almost the whole time: I was so excited! I picked my motto for the two years in office to be “Poetry ... in pursuit of happiness." A list of activities during her two-year tenure is on her website: www.trochimczyk.net

DOROTHY SKILES has served as the President of the Village Poets group since its inception and has planned the Monthly Readings at Bolton Hall Museum. Her bio and a sample of her poems are on this blog - she was our Featured Poet in September 2011.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Poetry Corner at Easter Festival and "Passing of the Laurels" on April 15

On Saturday, April 7, 2012, at 1:00 to 4:00 p.m. Village Poets of Sunland Tujunga will present a Poetry Corner at Easter Festival in Sunland Park, Sunland, CA.

Village Poets and guests will read their own poems for children, as well as classic poems, stories, and tongue-twisters. There will be songs, games, balloons, and awards. The following poets will participate: Maja Trochimczyk, Marlene Hitt, Joe DeCenzo, Dorothy Skiles, and Beverly Collins.

Village Poets wish everyone wonderful, safe, healthy, and happy Easter and Passover holidays!

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PASSING OF THE LAURELS CEREMONY

On April 15, 2012, at 3:00 p.m. at McGroarty Arts Center in Tujunga, CA, the Sixth Poet Laureate, Maja Trochimczyk, will pass the laurel wreath to the Seventh Poet Laureate, Dorothy Skiles. The new Poet Laureate will serve for a term of two years.

The ceremony will include poetry reading by Kathabela Wilson, Just Kibbe, Maja Trochimczyk, Joe DeCenzo, and the new laureate. The poets will be accompanied by musicians, guitarist, Dr. William Lenaburg and flautist Prof. Rick Wilson. The event will include group readings of poems by Maja Trochimczyk and Joe DeCenzo.

Joe DeCenzo, the Third Poet Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga will serve as the event's MC. The ceremony will also include commendations from the city, county and state officials. Reception to follow.

MAJA TROCHIMCZYK discusses her term as Poet Laureate on her blog Poetry Laurels: "As a new citizen (American for mere two years), and a resident of Sunland for just fifteen years, I was delighted to have been elected the Sixth Poet-Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga in March 2010. English is my second language, so it was quite an honor. During my “Passing of the Laurels” Ceremony in April I was wearing a silly grin almost the whole time: I was so excited! I picked my motto for the two years in office to be “Poetry ... in pursuit of happiness." A list of activities during her two-year tenure is on her website: www.trochimczyk.net

DOROTHY SKILES has served as the President of the Village Poets group since its inception and has planned the Monthly Readings at Bolton Hall Museum. Her bio and a sample of her poems are on this blog - she was our Featured Poet in September 2011.

Friday, March 16, 2012

Village Poets Extravaganza - March 25, 2012

John Steven McGroarty, California Poet Laureate, wrote "Just California" to celebrate the unique beauty of our part of the world. The poem has been published in a variety of venues and even became required reading for California school children. You can read it in an embroidered or crocheted form on display at the McGroarty Arts Center.

In response to the current California in the Arts Exhibition at the Center, Village Poets dedicate their March group reading, to be held on March 25, 2012 at 4:30 p.m. at Bolton Hall Museum, Tujunga, CA. The reading will feature their poetic responses to McGroarty's "Just California" and to newly written poems based on the themes of nature and the seasons.

Here's McGroarty's poem, "Just California"

JUST CALIFORNIA

When I am in California I am not in the West.
It is West of the West. It is just California.
—Theodore Roosevelt


'Twixt the seas and the deserts,
'Twixt the wastes and the waves,
Between the sands of buried lands
And ocean's coral caves;
It lies not East nor West,
But like a scroll unfurled,
Where the hand of God hath flung it
Down the middle of the world.

It lies where God hath spread it
In the gladness of His eyes,
Like a flame of jeweled tapestry
Beneath His shining skies;
With the green of woven meadows,
The hills in golden chains,
The light of leaping rivers,
And the flash of poppied plains.

Days rise that gleam in glory,
Days die with sunset's breeze,
While from Cathay that was of old
Sail countless argosies;
Morns break again in splendor
O'er the giant, new-born West,
But of all the lands God fashioned,
'Tis this land is the best.

Sun and dews that kiss it,
Balmy winds that blow,
The stars in clustered diadems
Upon its peaks of snow;
The mighty mountains o'er it,
Below, the white seas swirled—
Just California, stretching down
The middle of the world.




JOE DECENZO grew up in Los Angeles and majored in theater and English Literature. From 2004-06 he served as poet laureate of Sunland-Tujunga. He produced the “Shouting Coyote” performing arts festival and was a Department of Cultural Affairs grant recipient. His published works include The Ballad of Alley and Hawk and the Study Guide and Poetry Primer for the same collection. He currently serves on the planning committee for the Village Poets of Sunland-Tujunga and as Chair of Poet Laureate Search Committee.


MARLENE HITT is a Los Angeles poet, writer, and retired educator, a graduate of Occidental College who also studied at CSUN, UCLA and USC. A 26-year member of Chupa Rosa Writers of Sunland and of California Federation of Chaparral Poets, Ms. Hitt served as Poet-Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga in 1999-2001. Her poetry appeared in Eclipse, The Vineyard, Chopin with Cherries anthology and other publications. She published three books on local history, Sunland-Tujunga From Village to City (Arcadia Press, 2000 and 2005). She served as a columnist for The Foothill Leader, Glendale News-Press, and the Foothill Paper (since 1998). She currently writes for The Voice of The Village.


“Poetry has always been in my blood,” claims DOROTHY SKILES who has been writing poetry since her teenage years. A graduate of San Fernando Valley State College, and a retired social worker (after 34 years of public service), Dorothy published her first chapbook, The Sidewalk Gallery in 1979, while being married, raising twin boys, and managing a career. Other chapbooks followed: Ear to Earth (1996), Spine Flower Blues (1999) - a collaborative effort with fellow members of the Chuparosa Writers - and Riddle in the Rain (2003) - a joint venture with Marlene Hitt. Over the last 15 years, Dorothy has been involved in the local poetry scene and her poems appeared in a variety of community publications. The President of the Village Poets of Sunland-Tujunga organizing monthly readings at Bolton Hall Museum in Tujunga, she is also an active member of Chuparosa Writers and of SAGE, an educational program for seniors, managed jointly by CSUN and the Lutheran Church in the Foothills.

MAJA TROCHIMCZYK is a poet, music historian, photographer and translator born in Poland, educated in Warsaw and at McGill University in Canada (Ph.D., 1994), and living in California (www.trochimczyk.net). She received fellowships and awards from SSHRCC, ACLS, PAHA, USC. She published four books of music studies (After Chopin; The Music of Louis Andriessen; Polish Dance in Southern California, and A Romantic Century in Polish Music), two books of poetry illustrated with her photographs (Rose Always and Miriam’s Iris, 2008), the Chopin with Cherries: A Tribute in Verse (2010), as well as hundreds of peer-reviewed and popular articles on music and culture. Over 80 poems have appeared in such journals as the Epiphany Magazine, The Loch Raven Review, The Lily Review, Magnapoets, poeticdiversity, San Gabriel Valley Poetry Quarterly, Quill & Parchment, Ekprasis, and anthologies by Poets on Site and others. She taught music history at McGill University and USC, served as editor-in-chief for Polish Music Journal, the Poet-Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga, President of Modjeska Club and Founder/President of the Moonrise Press.

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Photos of Sunland (c) 2012 by Maja Trochimczyk.

Portrait of Maja with her artwork at the Scenic Drive Gallery, by Susan Dobay.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Sharon Rizk and Radomir Luza instead of the Oscars

The Village Poets of Sunland-Tujunga are pleased to announce their upcoming open MIC poetry event on Sunday, February 26, 2012 (yes the same time as the red carpet for the Oscars), at 4:30 – 6:30 p.m., at the Bolton Hall Museum, 10110 Commerce Ave., Tujunga, CA 91042.

The featured poets are Sharon Rizk and Radomir Luza!

Sharon Risk earned a Doctorate in Clinical Psychology and currently has a private psychotherapy practice in Pasadena. She also teaches at a local community college, and provides clinical supervision for psychotherapy interns and trainees at various agencies. Sharon is a published poet and has one CD collection of her original work “The Shadow of Your Longing: Poems to Grow With” available on Amazon.com.

Radomir Vojtech Luza’s love of politics an art comes from his parents who escaped Communism in their beloved Czechoslovakia in 1948. Radomir has averaged about a book a year. He has been widely-published in literary journals, anthologies and on websites, and has organized poetry readings across the country, including UNBUCKLED: NOHO POETRY, which he co-organizes and hosts in North Hollywood. Luza has also recorded three spoken word CDs: STRAIGHT OUTTA NOHO: INCOMPLETE, NOTHING WATER and IN THE DARK OF MORN: A JOURNEY TOWARDS LOVE.

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SHARON RIZK



Sharon Rizk was born in Oregon in 1943. She has spent the majority of her life in various communities within Los Angeles County, although her first few highly formative years of schooling occurred in San Francisco. She received a Bachelor’s degree in English Literature as a young adult, and returned to
school as an older adult to earn a Master’s degree and a Doctorate in Clinical Psychology.

She currently has a private psychotherapy practice in Pasadena, CA, teaches at a local community college, and provides clinical supervision for psychotherapy interns and trainees at various agencies. She is a published poet and has one CD collection of her original work “The Shadow of Your Longing: Poems to Grow With” available on Amazon.com. She also has conducted several free writing workshops for the community over the past two years and facilitated a low-fee weekend writing retreat at the end of September, 2011. She can be reached at 626-674-4599 or srizk@earthlink.net.

Coming Up for Air

There will be times
when you may notice
something
missing

remember then
you come from here
seaweed forests crooned
at your arrival

sweetly undulate
each time that you return
you will visit land
pretend

that walking suits you
but know
of something
not alarming wrong

but not precisely right
San Francisco dawn
when her bridge is nestled
in a vagrant cloud

fallen out of formation
to feel its way through
and round girders, cables
veins of traffic

vaguely heard
but not seen and so
the bridge as well
not there

you will come up for air
an other sea to wash through you
that turns your blood bright red
when you inhale

and darkens
as it courses through
your body
as if

there were a time continuum
upon which
you could spot yourself
to avoid confusion, disarray

the sense of
something
missing
as you turn and turn

when air becomes unbearable
when one more breath
would ask too much
remember then

you come from here
there is no past that binds
no future that compels
no constraint upon this moment

it
is
all
all here


_____________________________________

RADOMIR LUZA



Radomir Vojtech Luza’s love of politics an art comes from his parents who escaped Communism in their beloved Czechoslovakia in 1948. His mother was the youngest actress ever accepted into the Czech National Dramatic Conservatory, where she studied until Adolph Hitler closed-down the school in 1943. His father, Radomir Sr., was a Resistance fighter against the Nazis in WWII, and later a widely-published full professor of Eastern European History at Tulane University in New Orleans. His grandfather, General Vojtech Luza, led the Czech Resistance until he was murdered by the Nazis in 1944.

From his first book, THE HARAHAN JOURNAL (1986), to his 24th, THE CAFÉ LATTE TAPES, Radomir has averaged about a book a year. He has been widely-published in literary journals, anthologies and on websites, and has organized poetry readings across the country, including UNBUCKLED: NOHO POETRY, which he co-organizes and hosts in North Hollywood and a new Reading in NOHO at Phil’s Diner beginning January 18th.

Luza has also recorded three spoken word CDs: STRAIGHT OUTTA NOHO: INCOMPLETE, NOTHING WATER and IN THE DARK OF MORN: A JOURNEY TOWARDS LOVE.


Cleveland

The Starbucks on West 6th matters tonight
It slices through the poetry critic in my head like
The birth of death

Over there on the intersection of asphalt and pain the city stops making sense
It is a brown flamingo a flying submarine an undiscovered leper colony

Girls walk down Superior thumb prints in caffeine jungle nonfat milk not included
Boys sashay Lake Erie buttons bend below cuff
Water runs through levee of lips

Fish lying still
Finding me away from me
Raping the riverbed of retreat

The love we share
The backs I break
Cleveland free me
Squeeze me
Believe me

The easy way is getting harder
The numbness of instinct
The intrusion of genius
The arrogance of confidence

Your warehouses and flats
Buy words my sweaters take
My angels fake
My sister makes
Your rivers snake and shake through castrated causeways and bulletproof heartaches

At the parking lot across from the steak house I park my ulcer red Pontiac rent-a-car
And give Sam the attendant four dollars. I give the homeless guy down the block 35
Cents. After buying a Plain Dealer newspaper from a bilge box across the street I admit it
To myself: it is your people Cleveland your black, your red, your white, your green
Your baritone meadows and your rustic rattlesnakes
You close earlier than death my Midwestern mohawk
You open later than life Ohio ovary
Over there by the chophouse children lean on charred chandeliers and press tomatoes
Born while they ruled the universe in naked pinstripes
Cleveland you are my father
Guarding borders with a sunflower


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Camellia photos from Descanso Gardens (c) 2012 by Maja Trochimczyk

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Search for New Poet Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga for 2012-2014

The Poetry and Literature Committee of Sunland-Tujunga, co-chaired by Joe DeCenzo and Marlene Hitt, announces the search for the New Poet Laureate who will serve for a two-year term in 2012-2014.

The information about the position requirements and application format is enclosed below.
________________________


SCHEDULE OF EVENTS


January 31, 2012: DEADLINE for all applicant’s materials

February 26, 2012: notification of Finalists

March 11, 2012: Reading of finalists before the committee, at Bolton Hall, 4:00 pm (required for all finalists)

March 16, 2012: Public announcement of new Poet Laureate for 2012-2014

April 15, 2012: Passing of the Laurels Ceremony at McGroarty Art Center, 3pm

_________________________________________



POSITION DESCRIPTION

The Poet Laureate Position in Sunland-Tujunga

What is required of this position?


All applicants must be at least 18 years old and reside in the Sunland-Tujunga community. The position includes duties that involve adapting well to a variety of occasions: the maker of a toast, the bestower of a prize, the dedicator of a park, the composer of an ode to the Little League team, etc. As well as a position of high honor, it is a position of COMMUNITY SERVICE. The Poet Laureate serves a two year term.

The applicant should be:

• a resident of Sunland or Tujunga (which includes Shadow Hills - zip codes 91040 and 91042), and must be at least 18 years of age.

• a poet of good craftsmanship and one who has made an effort to study this craft and to hone his/her individual voice.

• comfortable with public speaking, appearances and interviews and should be able to speak clearly and capably.

As the poet represents the community, he/she should be a person of good character and one with a track record of contributing to the betterment of our community. We seek a person whose life and works reflect a love of our area which includes the flora, fauna, mountains, creeks and our diverse human community. This is a person who is the voice of our community, a cheerleader, a person whose words give wings to the heart of Sunland and Tujunga.

The Poet Laureate is encouraged to publish a collection of his or her works, as in a chapbook, for historical documentation. Those who choose the Poet Laureate are people with extensive knowledge of the community, educators, and those involved in arts and literature. Names of those judges may be presented upon request.
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DUTIES

Becoming Poet Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga is not only a great honor it is a commitment to the community. The Poet Laureate is expected to use his or her talents and means to make the community more aware of poetry.

While there are no specified duties for the Poet Laureate, the Poet Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga is expected to hold a reasonable public presence in the community.

Each Poet Laureate provides community service according to his or her special skills. In the past, Sunland-Tujunga Laureates have read poetry at community events and public schools; they have also written commemorative poems and created programs for the Arts, given speeches and readings. Each Laureate has produced at least one book.
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SUNLAND-TUJUNGA POET LAUREATE APPLICATION REQUIREMENTS


1) All applicants must be at least 18 years old and an active member of the Sunland-Tujunga community. You must show a history of active interest in Sunland-Tujunga.

2) Applicants must be able to demonstrate an active participation in poetry either through publication or featured poetry readings.

3) Applicants must agree to serve as Poet Laureate for a term of two years.

4) Please review the entire Requirements documents to be found at our website www.villagepoets.org

Please fill out the following:

Name ___________________________________________________

Address ____________________________________________________

Phone ___________________________________________________

Email ___________________________________________________



Printed Applications Forms are available at:

~ Mcgroarty Art Center 818.353.5285
~ Marlene Hitt 818.951.1041
~ The Sunland-Tujunga Branch Library

______________________________________



APPLICATION CONTENT:

Please provide the following:

1. List of publications and featured readings

2. Sample of poetry (approx. five poems. Two poems should represent Sunland-Tujunga)

3. History of community service.

4. One paragraph discussing a favorite poet.

5. One paragraph describing how you as Poet Laureate would promote poetry.

MAILING INSTRUCTIONS:

Submit completed poetry and items 1-5 from the above list and a check for $15.00 made out to McGroarty Art Center and send to:

McGroarty Art Center, Poet Laureate Applicant
7570 McGroarty Terrace, Tujunga CA 91042

If you have questions regarding the Poet Laureate program call Marlene Hitt at (818) 951-1041. Or E-mail to poetlaureate@villagepoets.org

Please check with our website www.villagepoets.org for complete schedules, full Poet Laureate requirements, and further Poetry information.

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Photos (C) 2010-2011 by Maja Trochimczyk

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Justin Kibbe Starts the Year of Black Water Dragon

There will be magic and mystery and shock and awe... when? On Sunday, January 22, 2012, at Bolton Hall Museum, 10110 Commerce Ave., Tujunga, CA 91042, from 4:30 – 6:30 p.m. Justin Kibbe is the Featured Poet for the Village Poets Monthly Poetry Reading.

Just Kibbe is a 21st century poet, a literaphic artist. Sometimes he feels like a photographer of words, searching for one in a thousand that speaks the inner drama of his awareness into a visual context for others to see and become aware.

Just Kibbe is the creator and curator of Curing The Pirate Pig, the first visual-narrative-poetry-exhibit (On Display in Fall 2012). He also designed and produced a Baby Obama Doll (limited edition of 500), which uses toy and packaging to make an interactive poetic statement about Americans’ relationships to political media.

Books by Just Kibbe include Elite Speaking Turquoise Monkey, a collection of text message poetry, printed side-by-side with equivalent English translations; Any Color Is Fine As Long As You Can See Through It, a coffee table book of collage art, written and designed with Rubik’s Cube as the mechanism which organizes the waterfall of original and stolen images and text into six chapters, each exploring a different phase of our lives’ cycle. His two chapbooks are Good God: Forbidden Poems, short poems with interpretive illustrations by Christopher Paul Russell, and Public Urinal Poetry Tour, a series of poems hand-written onto public urinals and photographed.

Just Kibbe is the current poet/artist in residence at Eliot Middle School in Pasadena; and he teaches alternative creativity classes at both John Muir High School and ARTworks in Pasadena as well.



__________________________________________________

After eleven

a poem for our anniversary

In bed we sleep, a mass of twisted spoons
baptizing our skins with chameleons you’ve carved from apples.

When you are clean I want you the way a banker wants money, the way little pigs want blankets, the way rivers want the ocean.

When I am dirty I want you the way a shark plays pool.

When I am clean, I want you the way cats want kittens,
the way an Angeleno drives the freeways, the way a snake wants legs.

When you are dirty, I want you the way a bear wants salmon.
I want your dirt in my teeth.
I want your head on an ice cream cone.
Make it a triple scoop. Sing to me.
Drown me with your strawberry rhubarb voice.

After eleven years, you are the sky to my skyscraper
the nitrogen to my gasoline.
I am drawn to you like earthquakes to California
like mirrors to your face.

_________________________

JUST KIBBE

Creator
Original Baby Obama Collectors Doll
www.BabyObama.com

Founding Captain & Publisher
Pirate Pig Press: An International Visual + Literary Portal
www.PiratePig.org

Managing Editor
THE Magazine: Pasadena Foothills Region
www.THEmagazine.biz

Founding Board Member, Past Board President
Indelible Ink: A Vanguard Performing Arts Series
www.IndelibleInk.net

____________________________________________

Telegram Collage by Justin Kibbe, used by permission.

Justin Kibbe's portrait with an Emu painted by Susan Dobay, (c) 2011 by Maja Trochimczyk.