Showing posts with label Mary Fitzpatrick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mary Fitzpatrick. Show all posts

Monday, May 26, 2025

Village Poets Presents Mary Fitzpatrick & Ella Czajkowska on June 22

 

Village Poets of Sunland/Tujunga welcomes featured poets Mary Fitzpatrick and Ella Czajkowska on Sunday, June 22, 4:30 pm at Bolton Hall Museum. There will also be an open mic and poets are invited to participate in the open reading segment of the event. The Bolton Hall Museum is located at 10110 Commerce Ave, Tujunga, CA 91040. Bolton Hall is a Los Angeles Historical Landmark built in 1913. Our reading starts at 4:30 pm and goes till 6:30 pm. Refreshments will be served. Free parking is available on the street and also at Elks Lodge 10137 Commerce Ave. Park behind the building and walk a short distance to Bolton Hall Museum across the street and down the block.

 

 

Mary Fitzpatrick’s poems have been finalists for the Joy Harjo Poetry Prize and the Slapering Hol Chapbook Award; short-listed for the Fish Publishing Prize; featured in Mississippi Review, Atlanta Review and North American Review as contest finalists; and published in such journals as Agenda (UK), Briar Cliff Review, The Paterson Review, Pratik, Red Canary, Silver Birch Press, Terrain, West Trestle Review, plus ten anthologies. A graduate of UC Santa Cruz with an MFA from UMass Amherst, she is a fourth-generation Angeleno who lives in Pasadena and feels at home in Ireland.

Three Poems by Mary Fitzpatrick

Days of Honey

Looking for light in the pandemic, we note

that the bees have returned. Vivid

in their occupation of the clean box

I’d readied, lured by seven-foot

sage-blossom stalks. I’m reassured

there are enough

to break away and form this hive

behind our garage, just in season

to double our pomegranates, a wealth

at any time and especially now.

It’s been three months. By November when

the pomegranates lose the red fuzz

under their leathery crowns, it will be nine.

Our time’s become timeless — is this

BC or AD?   Carthage    Ephesus    Campania?

Make the weeks count.   Lift

a rack of honeycomb from the hive

—it teems and glistens—

and let gold run all over the days.

Published on-line by Silver Birches, 2022

 Last Heat

Grass trampled to a tan parch;

Trees’ green depth blown to dust…

Road, road, ribbon of unfolding—

 

Known as map, called by name,

Calendar, sundial, memory, clock

Unraveling under the hot

 

Footsteps of the runaway, the footfalls

Of her tracker, panting over the layered

Dead, their tendril limbs—Road,

 

You let them clamber at her ankles,

Catch her cast-off, head-boom rags.

Dust returns; the footsteps fade.

 

       *       *       *       *

Now smell the blowze of summer

Curling skyward slow—no

Breeze, no wind

 

To change the season’s mind. As if

Its squandered end

Could put back seeds

 

Into their pods, rewind

Spent stalks and weeds—the things

Time gives so willingly to ash.

Published in Briar Cliff Review, April 2020 

Summer Beach Farewell

Salt Point, CA

Farewell    sweet seal face

Lizard tail    bladder pod    yarrow    farewell. 

Long heat of afternoon gives way

to winter’s storms and lashing wet. 

Today, I hug round stones’ warmth and gather

mollusks in the low tide’s pools:

black mussels    limpets    abalone

fierce and ridiculous crabs. 

Seal watches, undulate in repose. 

Wrapping kelp ribbons round my crops

I lay them in a bed of coals   glowing

amid stones.  My table is

the fallen log.  My company:

the otters tumbled down

their river’s chute to ocean’s edge

to teach their young to hunt.

Farewell.  The racks for drying

fish are folded.  Baskets bulge

with all the sea can give, with salt.  Tonight

I’ll climb    to shelter among trees.

 I’ll turn my back on sea.   No one

will come for me.   At this last feast

I drink the brine.   I gather

one last bleached bone. 

From the basket on my back it grows

radiant as the lonely moon.   

Published in Miramar, 2019


 

Alchemy of Words is the first English-language poetry book of Ella Czajkowska who previously published a book of poems in Polish. These 70 poems deal with themes of nature, divinity, human emotions, existential contemplation and the complexities of life. Ella Czajkowska is a professional Translator, Transcriptionist, Polish and English-Speaking certified Neuro-Linguistic Programming Practitioner and Neuro-Linguistic Programming Master Practitioner, Certified Personal & Business Life Coach, Graphic Designer, English Second Language Teacher, Poet, and PR Manager. Her love of creative writing was born in high school, where she started writing poetry and short stories. In 2015, Ella started to write poetry in both Polish and English, and from 2017 she writes only in English. Her book of Polish language poetry, entitled “Tam, gdzie umierajÄ… marzenia”, was published in Rzeszów by Sowello in 2019. Her English-language poems appeared in the California Quarterly and the Crystal Fire anthology (Moonrise Press, 2022). She was nominated for the Pushcart Prize in 2022 by the California State Poetry Society for her poem "The Calling”.

Three Poems by Ella 

And Still
 

And still hoping and dreaming still
after years of silence and cold,
of breached walls and fallen will -
a thousand years of pain untold.
Body a vessel to be filled
with moonbeam silver, sunlight kissed.
What never was cannot be killed;
what was never known cannot be missed

Endless Feast


I fear the fear of passing days
That lacking be in hopeful grace
Of softer light and lighter ways,
Bereft of new thoughts sweet embrace,
When long be gone the better words,
When long be gone the heat of youth;
That by the time I cut the cords
I will have known the bitter truth.
For I have sat at highest tables
Of their feasts I have partaken,

Ate the fruits of true and fables,
With grandeur been overtaken;
And saw all there was to be seen,
And heard all there was to be heard,
And learned what was, what could have been
I have been still, I have been stirred;
And I have sung a thousand songs,
And I have thought a thousand thoughts,
And I have done the rights and wrongs,
And I have plowed a thousand plots;
And yet the hunger naught abates
For every bite that I have taken
Bite back it did, more yet inflates;
It has no wish to be forsaken.
Must dreams then end, all slumber cease?
What is this law? Or is this need?
Does nature call for strife, then peace,
Then strife again? A sacred creed?
Unmatched then burns that fervid fire
That none can stop, and none can quell;
In its unmet wroth desire
It shall devour itself as well.

Eat Your Heart Out

 

Eat my heart blacken it and season it;

Split apart my ribcage, the choicest pieces

Lay beyond its protection. Reason it
Not with me, halt calm, whatever peace is
This is all passion, this is all fire.
Eat my words devoured from my lips,
Savored; steal breath from my lungs, sweet desire!
Make me mute with awe, that all sound from me strips.
Have my glances, my blushes, my shyness,
My modesty, timidity, demur,
Whisper of grace, beauty, and fineness;
Unravel, till denial and assent blur.
Consume as one consumes long sought meaning:

With desperation born of ceaseless dreaming
 

 Copyright 2024 by Ella Czajkowska and Moonrise Press


Friday, May 3, 2019

Ekphrastic Poetry Inspired by the Art of Sandy Fisher - Workshop by Pamela Shea, May 26, 2019

Where the Road Bends by Sandy Fisher

Village Poets invite poets and poetry lovers to its next event, Ekphrastic Poetry Inspired by the Art of Sandy Fisher - Workshop by Pamela Shea. It will be held on Sunday, May 26, 2019 at 4:30 p.m. at Bolton Hall Museum, 10110 Commerce Avenue, Tujunga, CA 91042. The reading will include poems inspired by the art of Sandy Fisher, and a Feature by Pamela Shea, Sunland-Tujunga's Poet Laureate in 2018-2020.  Refreshments will be served and $3 donations collected for the cost of the venue, the second historical landmark in the City of Los Angeles, that celebrated its centennial in 2013.  The Museum is managed by the Little Landers Historical Society.




FEATURED ARTIST - SANDY FISHER ON MAY 26, 2019

Creative outlets have been a lifelong pursuit of mine and I turned to oil painting in 2005, and was blessed to win my first award.  Finally, I had found the direction and purpose of my creative drive. Now, I cannot imagine doing anything else as painting is life itself for me. The landscape of the West and California, particularly the unspoiled open spaces of the coast, desert, valleys and mountains are my favorite subject matter.  I am especially intrigued by the play of light and shadow and the mingling of warm and cool hues, which captivate my heart and provides the catalyst for me to put brush to canvas in an effort to convey to the viewer my emotional response to the scene.

When asked about what motivates me to paint something, my answer revolves around the desire to share the powerful awakening in my soul, which is fueled by the infinite beauty and mystery of nature. To me, there is confirmation of the divine in the complexity of nature; with all its variety and intricacies. I fully believe at the heart of creating memorable art is the ability to reveal to the viewer what wonder lies in the everyday world around us. 

Through my many travels, I am provided with a bounty of unique environments. I love to capture the fascinating scenes and overlooked details of our planet, even if it is in my own backyard. I am especially attracted by all the nuance of color and values in a scene,flower, or object. By utilizing dramatic natural lighting of the early morning or late afternoon combined with compositional elements involving line, color, texture, contrast and shape, my hope is the viewer will be drawn to take a more intimate look.

SELECTED AWARDS AND EXHIBITS:

2018 Art Classic, SCAA, Honorable Mention
2018 Art Matters (Huntington Library) San Marino League – Juried Artist
2017 Art Classic, Santa Clarita Artists’ Assoc. (SCAA) 2 nd Place and Merit in Oils
2015 Santa Paula Society of the Arts, 79 th Annual Show – Juried Artist
2015 & 2010 First Floor Gallery, City of Santa Clarita, Juried Artist
2014 Hope Murals, Lily Oncology, Winner – One of Ten Nationwide
2014 “Icons of California” and “Splendors from the Garden, La Galleria Gitana
2018, 2012 & 2009 Solo Art Exhibit, Canyon Theatre
2011 Art Classic, SCAA, Honorable Mention
2011 & 2010 Outwest, Newhall, CA – Featured Artist
2010 Festival of Art, City of Santa Clarita, Juried Artist
2009 Burbank Art Festival, West Coast Productions, Juried Artist
2009 Art Classic, SCAA, Honorable Mention
2007 Art Classic, SCAA, Gold Medal
2006 Art Classic, SCAA, Silver Medal
2005 Art Classic, SCAA, Honorable Mention


FEATURED POET - PAMELA SHEA


PAMELA SHEA, the ninth Poet Laureate of Sunland Tujunga, has lived in the area for nearly 40 years. She is a writer and poet who chronicles her life through verse. Pam was born and raised in the foothills community of La Crescenta and studied at the University of Redlands. Her professional life has included medical office work, from which she is retired, and teaching in the fitness field, in which she is currently active. She has a long history of community service, which she has combined with her writing. She finds inspiration in family and nature as well as in triumph and strife. She enjoys sharing her poems in hometown open poetry readings. Poetry has been her passion and therapy for as long as she can remember. Her poems appeared numerous times in the local Voice of the Village newspaper, as well as in the monthly newsletter for Salem Lutheran Church in Glendale and the fundraising literature for the Health Ministries of the Foothills. Other poems appeared online in Village Poets and Poetry Laurels blogs.

Ms. Shea was a featured reader at the Shouting Coyote Performing Festival in 2004 and led a workshop at that event on the Poetry of Nature. Since then, she participated in many readings with the Wide Open Readers, led by Elsa Frausto, and the Village Poets of Sunland-Tujunga at Bolton Hall Museum.  Pamela has hosted several open mic readings around town and has also written and read poems for special occasions at the Sunland-Tujunga Branch Library and McGroarty Arts Center.  She has also read at performances by The Windsong Players Chamber Ensemble and had one of her poems choreographed by California Contemporary Ballet in conjunction with the Windsong Players. She attended the 2018 Drawing Inspiration from the Parks program in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks.  Her extensive record of community service includes many endeavors, such as volunteering for the Verdugo Hills Family YMCA's annual Campaign Support Fund Drive for several years. She was also a member of VHY's Senior Advisory Committee. She started a poetry group that met weekly at VHY as well as served as a board member for two terms (six years of service) for the Health Ministries of the Foothills. She has also been involved in the Relay for Life. Ms. Shea is the proud mother of three and grandmother of two. She has been married 43 years and has lived in the same house in Sunland for almost 40 years.

The next reading by Pamela Shea is at the ASKEW READING SERIES (Second Saturdays) May 11, 7:00-9:00 PM. Hosts Seven Dhar, Slim FitzGerald, & Ellie Askew. The Pasadena Highlands, 1575 E. Washington Blvd., Pasadena 91104, between Allen and Lake Ave. Featuring Vietnamese Nink Poise, Sunland-Tujunga Poet Laureate Pamela Shea, and Christopher Nyerges (christophernyerges.com) + OPEN MIC. Free.


ARTWORK BY SANDY FISHER

We are asking poets to write poems to eight paintings by Sandy Fisher, more information about her will be posted later, here are just the paintings to view and write about.



Awaiting Monet

Autumn Ablaze


Break of Day at Big Rock Creek


Golden Hour in Owens Valley

Where the Road Bends

Springdale Sunset on Johnson Mountain

 Quiet Harbor

Sweet Whisper


PHOTOS FROM READING BY MARY FITZPATRICK