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Tuesday, March 21st/2023 – World Poetry Day

March 20, 2023 by Nicola

Poetry can change the way people view the world, inspire others, and mend the bonds between people and create harmony with one another.

However, poetry to many can be considered a dying art in a world filled with technology and more advanced ways of conveying messages of art and beauty.

World Poetry Day aims to appreciate the sentiment that poetry can create, forming meaningful relationships and expand one’s mind about history and cultures.

Learn about World Poetry Day

World Poetry Day takes place every year to promote the teaching of poetry, as well as the publishing, writing, and reading of this form of writing around the world. It was declared by UNESCO in 1999 and they stated that their purpose for creating this day was:

“with the aim of supporting linguistic diversity through poetic expression and increasing the opportunity for endangered languages to be heard”

They also stated in their original declaration that World Poetry Day was about giving fresh impetus and recognition to international, regional, and national poetry movements.

All in all, this is a day that is designed to inspire and educate, as well as giving poets all around the world recognition for their creative brilliance!

History of World Poetry Day

World Poetry Day was conceived during the 30th General Conference in Paris in 1999. Those at the conference had the ambition to support the growth of linguistic diversity through poetics and help in increasing awareness of endangered and dying so they can be heard.

World Poetry Day also honors poets, revives the practice of poetry recitals, and promotes poetry as a form of art that connects people to their humanity. With generations upon generations of poets and time periods to choose from, poetry can gain insight into the ideas and feelings of that time.

By also attending poetry recitals, people can experience the languages that words and emotions are spoken through and experience emotional bonds with others.

World Poetry Day is hosted by the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization, a subsection of the United Nations that promotes the advancement of culture through effort, communication, and passion.

World Poetry Day is annually celebrated by schools, organizations, libraries, and publishers all over the globe through teaching about poets, styles of poetry, and the languages that they’re read through.

Throughout the day, people host festivals, talk about their favorite poets and learn about the different ways that poetry can be written and spoken. UNESCO also offers social media kits and other resources to help those around the world learn about how to read poetry and understand its meaning in day to day life.

How to celebrate World Poetry Day

Celebrate World Poetry Day by reading some poetry. Look up poets such as Sylvia Plath, John Keats, William Wordsworth, and Ezra Pound. If you want to learn more about poets out there, then attend a college class on poetry, or head on over to a spoken word event to catch up on the latest poets on the stage.

There are lots of other exciting ways that you can celebrate World Poetry Day. Rather than reading a poem, why not watch a poetry reading? Thanks to the likes of YouTube, we have access to all sorts of videos today, and so it should not be difficult to find a poetry reading that interests you. The live recital of a poem, especially from the author who has written it, is extremely powerful. It takes the depth of meaning of the words to a whole other level. We would recommend taking a look at readings from the likes of Hera Lindsay Bird and Jay Bernard. They’re pretty incredible!

If you have children, World Poetry Day is the perfect opportunity for you to increase their awareness of this literary form and show them how fun and exciting poetry can be. After all, not all poems are serious! Poems can make us laugh, especially those that use clever wordplay and puns.

You can find lots of great books of poems that have been specifically designed for children. We would recommend Roger McGough’s Poetry Pie, which features more than 50 poems that will make your child laugh. Other good options include Cat Among the Pigeons by Kit Wright and Gargling with Jelly by Brian Patten.

If World Poetry Day has got you feeling inspired, why not write your own poem? You don’t need to be the next Shakespeare to enjoy writing poetry! Whether you decide to share it with other people or keep your poems to yourself is entirely up to you. If you’re feeling at a loss, don’t worry. It can seem a bit overwhelming if you have never written a poem before! It is always good to start with a goal in mind. What are you hoping to achieve by writing the poem?

Some other types include communicating your theme, using concrete words rather than abstract words, using similes and metaphors, using images, and avoiding sentimentality and cliches. You will find lots of interesting books and videos online about writing poems, so you can look up some of these to help you. There is no right or wrong way to write a poem or to begin the process, it is all about finding what works for you, and so it can definitely help to listen to some of the different methods that people use.

Find your favorite poet and share them on social media using the hashtag #WorldPoetryDay. Let your friends and family know today’s a day to appreciate language and the way we communicate with one another.

Source: World Poetry Day (March 21st) | Days Of The Year

 

Check out my other Blogs for Poetry Prompts:

Everyday Art Every Day Prompts — Write Like Your Fav Poet: World Poetry Day – Tuesday, March 21st, 2023 – Everyday Art Every Day

World Poetry Day — Tuesday, March 21st – Nicola Schneider, OCT – a spot of reflection (weebly.com) for an “I am Music” poetry prompt…

Filed Under: Poetry Inspiration, poetry prompt Tagged With: #worldpoetryday, Canadian Poets, CanadianPoets, Hamilton Poets, HamiltonPoets, Ontario Poets, OntarioPoets, poetry, poetry prompts, Tower Poetry Society Hamilton, TowerPoetrySocietyHamilton, world poetry day

Poet: Jennifer Tan & Landscape Artist: Anna Kutishcheva

March 4, 2023 by Nicola

A dance of poetry & art…

“The Reflection”

 

Poet: Jennifer Tan

Jennifer Tan has won the Short Works Prize for Poetry in 2016 and in 2020, and was long-listed for the Vallum Award for poetry in 2020. She has been published in the poetry anthologies of Tamaracks: Canadian Poetry for the 21st Century, and The Beauty of Being Elsewhere: Poems of Journey and Sojourn, and on the website of The Wild Word. Her haikus have found their way to the Asahi Haikuist Network. She is a regular contributing poet and member of the Tower Poetry Society.

 

 

When did you start writing poetry?

In my mid-teens I had to write two poems for an English class. It took me thirty years to recover from it to choose to write poetry and contribute to our local poetry magazines.

 

Why do you write poetry?

Writing poetry is something I dared myself to plunge into while knowing that the risk is not going to be catastrophic. It is quite a safe activity. It is an escape burrowing through words and then seeing the light. It is liberating when writing a poem evolves beyond what I started with and ended up as a surprise. Writing is a pleasant way to discover more of the self, nature, and understand the state of our world while indulging with words that chart their own melody.

 

What is the best advice you have ever received and would share with new poets?

I don’t recall any specific advice but you learn from listening to what other poets appreciate in poetry and their positive comments on yours.

(Like participating in a Tower Poetry Society workshop! More info here!)

 

Can you comment on your process?

I start with an image, or a situation, or a phrase I picked up that intrigued me. I would scribble lines on paper, choose an appropriate word to replace one that does not carry the mood to match the poem as best I can. I would rearrange the lines to the pace of the poem and remove words that stumble the flow. Some days later I will go through it again to make it better. I would not write if I were hungry.

 

Is there anything else you wish to share?

Be aware of the power of language and that you have access to it. Be easy on yourself in the process of writing. Read a variety of books. Be open to possibilities and ideas. If you want to write a poem it is probably that you know you can and you will write one.

 

 

More Jennifer…

Instagram: @

https://thewildword.com/poetry-jennifer-tan/

http://towerpoetry.ca/poetryplus/Poetry/60-2Tan.html

 

 

Landscape Artist: Anna Kutishcheva

“I was trained as an illustrator, and the process of reading, feeling and coming up with a visual representation of the author’s idea is a puzzle that never ceases to amaze me.”         https://landscapesbyanna.com

 

Why did you choose that poem?

The poem ( THE STUFF WE ARE MADE OF by Jennifer Tan) is simply beautiful, and for me, it was a love from the first read. The poem is very dynamic and reads like a spell; it has a deep and profound meaning. The water is such a fantastic element; it even remembers what happens to it. Just think that the water in your cup touched billions of sentient beings and witnessed innumerable events! The water is a stream, just like a stream of life. The water is a giver and a taker of life, and it is present as an allegory in many stories and teachings.

The poem reminded me of Sutras of Mountain and Water by Dogen:

“Water ascends to the sky as rain.” It mounts high heaven, it’s inside flame, in thinking, analysis, discrimination, in awareness itself, there’s nowhere it doesn’t get.

“Water descends to earth as rivers, whose marrow is the sages. Water’s not just rivers and seas, it makes rivers and seas from within water…Nonetheless, there is no water inside the lands, nor lands within water.”(From Abruptly Dogen, a recently published translation of the Zen master’s writing by Kidder Smith).

Also, I painted water many times: streams, lakes, waves, reflections and depth. So the poem called to me!

 

What were the challenges? What was easy?

My task of creating an illustration was both easy and hard. Every line is inspirational and creates so many visual associations, yet I had to choose only one, the most compelling image. My final choice was to paint an infinite opportunity and change; stillness.

 

Can you tell us a bit more about your process from idea to finished work? Why those colours and shapes?

The central work is landscape, acrylic on canvas, 24×36, inspired by a photo of North Ontario lake by my friend. I used a limited palette, mostly a mix of magenta and green, which can create many hues of blue and purple. There are many islands on this lake, and moonlight travels between and far beyond these islands, creating space and opportunity. Then I had a lot of fun with the frame, which was created digitally with adobe fresco. Here all movement happens.

 

Size of the piece. How is it mounted?  Price if for sale. Where is it available ?

acrylic on canvas, 24″ x 36″     $1,800       without frame (the frame is digital)

Available for sale from akutishcheva@gmail.com

@anna_kutishcheva –  https://www.instagram.com/tamara_h_campbell/

 

Anything else you’d like to share?

The best part of creating artwork is to become one with the subject. This time it was the magical water and its play. And I still don’t know what it is!

 

Other Projects/Art Available:

https://www.saatchiart.com/account/profile/96051

https://www.thespec.com/entertainment/art/2019/06/14/regina-haggo-nature-comes-to-life-in-anna-kutishcheva-s-landscapes-at-burlington-gallery.html

 

 

 

 

 

I published a whole book in this style – Singing Woods…

 

https://www.amazon.ca/Singing-Woods-Anna-Kutishcheva/dp/1990595065/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1674869753&sr=8-1

 

We hope you have enjoyed this second dance of poetry and visual art.

ARTISTS, there are poems still available to choose from and time to get in on the project… https://towerpoetry.ca/po-art-ry-poems/

POETS, stay tuned… we will open up submissions towards the end of 2023. As for what will happen with PoARTry, we don’t know.

This is an organic project, and we are thinking of a possible exhibit or publication. Who knows?! What we do know is that we have a lot of exciting work by talented poets and artists to share with you each month!

 

Did you know?     You can pop over to our Tower Poetry Facebook group for discussion!

Filed Under: PoARTry Tagged With: Canadian Artists, Canadian Poets, CanadianArtists, CanadianPoets, danceofPoetry&Art, Hamilton Artists, Hamilton Poets, HamiltonArtists, HamiltonPoets, Local Artists HamiltonON, localartistsHamiltonON, Ontario Artists, Ontario Poets, OntarioPoets, poARTry, poetry, Tower Poetry Society Hamilton, TowerPoetrySocietyHamilton, TPS

Presenting PoARTry

January 15, 2023 by Nicola

Tower Poetry Society, in collaboration with visual/textile artist Lorraine Roy, presents…

A dance of poetry & visual art…

After the success of the first PoARTry event*, we endeavour to create a similar collaboration between poets and artists that will showcase virtually with the possibility/opportunity for an in-person exhibition after the first year. This may become an ongoing event.

* In 2021, poets were encouraged to submit poems to inspire local artists to create visual art. And so the dance began… the results were displayed in an exhibit in the Barber Atrium at the Carnegie Gallery.

Tower Poetry Society POETS have submitted poems that inspire visual art or fine crafts. And, artists have selected the poems that inspire each to create a piece in their chosen visual art field.

Please join us as we reveal these unique partnerships on the FIRST SATURDAY over the next many months… a poet & a:

  • Stained Glass Artist
  • Mosaic Artist
  • Wood Burning Artist
  • Painter
  • Landscape Artist
  • Textiles Artist
  • Pencil Artist
  • Jewellery Artist
  • Mixed Media Artist

Artists, there is still time to select a poem to inspire your art! Our first dance will be on Saturday, February, 4, 2023 at midnight… for now, it’s a secret!

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: CanadianArtists, CanadianPoets, danceofPoetry&Art, HamiltonArtists, HamiltonPoets, localartistsHamiltonON, OntarioArtists, OntarioPoets, poARTry, poetry, TowerPoetrySocietyHamilton, TPS

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