Folks
I'm not longer Poet Laureate of the Western Slope.
That lasted from 13011 to 13013 (2011-13 CE).
Been too busy to blog, but my column Up Bear Creek appears in the MontroseMirror.com weekly and my column Looking South from Lone Cone appears in the Four Corners Free Press monthly
Come check out our Talking Gourds poetry program under the umbrella of the Telluride Institute
www.tellurideinstitute.org
The many projects there -- Ute Reconciliation, Fen Advisory, the Telluride Mushroom Festival and Talking Gourds -- keep me plenty busy...
Thanks, Art Goodtimes
pictured here in SF with with AmanitaScoot out at Fort Point near the Golden Gate
Tracking the lyric valuables in the shadow of Lone Cone on Colorado's Western Slope
Saturday, February 27, 2016
Friday, April 12, 2013
Aaron Abeyta Named New Western Slope Poet Laureate
Aaron Abeyta reading at the Karen Chamberlain Poetry Festival, 2012 |
Colorado, Denver, the Pike’s
Peak Region, San Miguel County
– many regions and jurisdictions have begun honoring poets by naming them to
the honorary position of poet laureate. San Miguel County has Elle Metrick of
Norwood as its laureate, the Pike’s Peak Region has Price Strobridge, Chris
Ransick’s term as Denver’s laureate ended in 2010 but funding cuts have
precluded the naming of another so far, and Colorado College poet/prof Dave
Mason is the state’s much-esteemed laureate.
Elle Metrick |
Western Colorado has always been
a long ways from the urban centers of the Front Range, and has sometimes been
overlooked in the field of arts. But poetry has been a vibrant and powerful
practice on the Western Slope – hosting a number of poetry festivals over the
years: Talking Gourds in Telluride, Sparrows in Salida, the Festival of the
Imagination in Del Norte, and now the Karen Chamberlain Poetry Festival in
Carbondale.
Chris Ransick |
By way of celebrating that fact, the festival named a Western
Slope Poet Laureate two years ago. In a stealth move that caught me by
surprise, I was honored with that title. And now, the laurels pass over to a
new Western Slope Poet Laureate – Aaron Abeyta. Award-winning poet and
professor at Adams State College in Alamosa, Aaron’s family hails from many
generations in the San Luis Valley’s
Antonito community.
Dave Mason |
Here's a letter poem for Aaron that I read at the festival when we made the laureate announcement.
a letter to Aaron
as the sun rises en nuestros corazones
hermano
let us begin with a prayer
because everything we invite into our lives
sits at the table of the sacred
in nomine madre tierra
et padre cielo
et spiritus pueblo
here at Cloud Acre
on the cusp of the San Juan
Mountains
and the Colorado
Plateau
the grass still sleeps in its gray and gold
though change is in the air
the wild punishing winds
that test our allegiance to spring
gusts that sweep the mesa clean
like a mad dowser searching for water
the flowering we can’t see yet
but that we wind-blown ones
believe will come
and humbly share as a ray of hope
this is the time of year
when our eyes search for anything green
some sign of life born of water
and sun
that golden orb of all our inspirations
reflected in the light that pours
from our body’s solar plexus
to protect us from the harm
that spins its devils in the dust
and to warm the world
into yielding us its cornucopia of gifts
the mantle of this award comes
from just such a gifting
the promise of Colcha you wove
into our minds as a cape of many colors
a path of many ways
a multi-ethnic design flourishing
out of the fabric of many craftings
Aaron, I have seen a horse’s eye
the galaxies and nebulae
in that deepest brown
that is skin and mud and the land
that we love
married as we are to earth
to each other
to this place called Colorado
its ancient reds its skies beyond blue
and the invading whites of winter
your voice is la primavera
four syllables that inspire us
to bud
to bring our best green into being
yours are the seeds our love is made of
in the sunlight of your lyric valuables
in the poems you fashion for us
like a child’s mud cakes
on the banks of the San Miguel
we grow playful
and are inspired to work
at what is most important
the messy pigments of truth-telling
those lessons nature affords us
the real opportunity to learn
and so we share this honor with you
amigo
that you may go on inspiring
the many adams and
eves
longing for los colores en sus ojos
the fire in your belly
and this green we set above your brow
is meant not so much as crown
but as beacon
un rayo de esperanza
Signage
EUPHEMISMS
… Hey, CDOT, what was wrong with those old “Deer Crossing” signs? … Okay, maybe “Wildlife
Crossing” -- if it had to change … But did we really need the yellow hazard
sign outside Colona that reads “Wildlife Detection Zone”?
SPEAKING OF SIGNS … Had to smile near San Luis Valley’s Casita Park
heading east of Moffat at the highway sign for the White Eagle Lodge atCrestone: “Lodging/Tarot”. In Crestone I guess getting a room and a reading
pairs like chicken and white wine.
SPEAKING OF FOOD … If you do find yourself at the foot of the Sangre de Cristo Range,
wandering Sedona North in search of sustenance, let me recommend the Bliss Café
… Delicious food, simple setting, welcoming service. Highly recommended.
Monday, April 8, 2013
Windfall
A Portland-based “Journal of Poetry of Place” offered a critique of modernism in their spring 2009 issue, which I just happened upon in my midden heap at Cloud Acre.
Editors Bill Silverly and Michael McDowell include an Afterword with each issue, and this one was entitled: “Gardener Poets.” I loved Windfall, subscribed for a year, and was only disappointed in that they limited their submissions to poets of the Pacific West Coast states. Though hardly a fault. Best to keep things regional and not try to get too big – that’s my resiliency model these days.
But I’m a gardener poet. I wish the Southern Rockies had its own Journal of Poetry of Place, or maybe it does and I just haven’t learned of it yet.
Anyway, lot of the theoretical underpinnings for the Windfall critique rest with Robert Pogue Harrison’s Gardens: An Essay on the Human Condition (Univ. of Chicago, 2008).
As Harrison puts it, “Modernism found its objective correlative in the wasteland rather than the garden”.
Here’s some short excerpts from Silverly and McDowell’s Afterword … Harrison also contrasts the gardener’s perspective with the cult of consumerism that has seemed to dominate life from mid-twentieth century until now. Harrison borrows the phrase “more life” from Lionel Trilling to characterize our craving to turn the earth into “a consumerist paradise where everything is given spontaneously, without labor, suffering or husbandry”.
Then Silverly and McDowell quote Harrison directly – and I find it a quite serviceable rationale why I continue to grow 50+ varieties of potatoes in a busy public and private life… Our attempts to re-create Eden amount to an assault on creation. That is the danger of the era. Precisely because our frenzy is fundamentally aimless while remaining driven, we set ourselves goals whose main purpose is to keep the frenzy going until it consummates itself in sloth … If at present we are seeking to render the totality of the earth’s resources endlessly available, endlessly usable, endlessly disposable, it is because endless consumption is the proximate goal of a production without end … Or, better, consumption is what justifies the frenzy of production, which in turn justifies consumption, the entire cycle serving more to keep us busy than to satisfy our real needs
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
Reg Saner Receives first Chamberlain Award in Carbondale Aaron Abeyta named second Western Slope Poet Laureate
Thanks to the dedication and drive of Valerie Haugen and Lon Winston of the
Thunder River Theatre Company, Carbondale
hosted its third annual Western Slope poetry festival this past weekend. Named
for Karen Chamberlain, the event celebrates the continuing inspiration that
Karen provided for many poets – not only in the Roaring Fork Valley where she
made her home, but around Colorado and the region.
Uche Ogbuchi leads workshop outside |
Karen was founder of the
Aspen Writers’ Foundation, coordinator of the Canyonlands Field Institute
Desert Writers Workshop near Moab, winner of the 1983 The Nation Discovery
Prize and the 1989 Colorado Council on the Arts Poetry Fellowship, and poetry
editor of the Mountain Gazette for five years. She was often a visitor to
Telluride, as well as a colleague and personal friend of mine. As Valerie is
quoted in the Aspen Times as saying,
““What struck me about Karen was how wise she was and how kind she was. She
thought everyone should write. In the last week of her life, she even helped
someone finish his book”
Judyth Hill |
This year's fest squeezed in lots of performance slots for
established veterans and all ages of newbies. While of course there were
stand-outs, the reigning ethos honored everyone willing to perform, and the
audience listened attentively to each and every diverse voice.
It was great to catch the dazzling wobble that is Judyth Hill of Mexico’s San Miguel de Allende, the trickster/heckler/sage Jack Mueller of Ridgway, fellow emcee Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer of
Placerville, Stewart Warren of
Albuquerque, Wendy Videlock, Uche Ogbuchi, Rachel Kellum, Kit Muldoon, Trinity
La Fay, Danny Rosen, Bob King, Jimi Bernath, Airica Parker, M.D. Friedman, Laurie James, Jared Smith, Erika Moss Gordon, Valerie Szarek, Debbi Brody, SETH, Jeff Spahr-Summers, Roseanna Frechette, Eric and Jacob Walter, Bill Kight, Sandra Dorr, Rick Kempa, Mark Todd, Word Horde, Patrick Curry, and more.
I could spend the rest of the column just naming names. It was an amazing collection of state and regional poets -- all of whom gave short but spirited presentations.
And the Gourd Circle finale on Sunday morning was among the more powerful listening and shining sessions I’ve ever participated in. For poetry on Colorado's Western Slope, this was a landmark event.
And the Gourd Circle finale on Sunday morning was among the more powerful listening and shining sessions I’ve ever participated in. For poetry on Colorado's Western Slope, this was a landmark event.
CHAMBERLAIN AWARD
I’ve long admired Reg Saner. He’s published widely in national and regional magazines, been invited to international poetry festivals, and won lots of awards
already. I’ve been wanting to bring him out to the Western Slope for years.
In fact, almost 30, since I first heard him read from So This Is The Map (Random House) at the former Mesa State
College in Grand Junction in 1984, the year my oldest daughter was born.
Reg Saner |
His poetry has been
a powerful influence on me and those familiar with his work. His books of poetry and essays employ a rich forest of language tossed into the
furnace of the natural world to bring us heat, and warmth, and insight. It was a great honor to be able to award him the
first Chamberlain Award for Lifetime Poetic Achievement here in Colorado.
On
top of everything, Reg is an exceedingly kind, genuinely humble, wisely humorous elder who spent more
time listening to the young and old others at the festival than in shining himself, although when he read, he really did shine. There’s a lot of Reg's friends who will be lobbying the Governor to appoint him as Colorado’s next
state Poet Laureate once the wonderful term of current PL Dave Mason has expired. I would encourage you to join us in that effort.
Valerie Szarek and Jimi Bernath doing flute and haiku |
Monday, April 1, 2013
CHANGE ALERT / soon
this is not a joke
my term as western slope poet laureate has changed
with the announcement of aaron abeyta's selection
as colorado's new western slope poet laureate
at the karen chamberlain poetry festival in carbondale
this past weekend...
so i'm planning on a new blog addy
changing this site from
goodtimespoetlaureate.blogspot.com
to
artgoodtimes.blogspot.com
or maybe cloudacre.blogspot.com
or maybe even deviantbonbonz.blogspot.com
stay alert
things will change
my term as western slope poet laureate has changed
with the announcement of aaron abeyta's selection
as colorado's new western slope poet laureate
at the karen chamberlain poetry festival in carbondale
this past weekend...
so i'm planning on a new blog addy
changing this site from
goodtimespoetlaureate.blogspot.com
to
artgoodtimes.blogspot.com
or maybe cloudacre.blogspot.com
or maybe even deviantbonbonz.blogspot.com
stay alert
things will change
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
UBC1313 .... Spring Hoedown in Mancos
SPRING HOEDOWN … Tami Graham of Mancos sure knows how to put on a great show. Her family-friendly
benefit for the Montezuma County School-to-Farm Project (and her own non-profit
The Pay It Forward Fund) packed the Mancos Opera House March 16th.
As
emcee, I got to auction off two live humans (for three and a half hours of
gardening work). A neophyte as auctioneer, the calling was slow but the bidding
was spirited – Farm Boy Harrison went for $70 and Farm Girl Blaize for $88.
We
square-danced up a storm with Carla Roberts and the Wild West Squares. My Rainbow
buddy (and former Durango Mayor) Michael Rendon led his Caruta Roma Gypsy Band
in a slurry of rousing dance tunes. Ashley Edwards of Hello Dollface delighted
the crowd with indie soul, and Robby
Overfield and the Breaks
did their soulful music for the late-evening dancers.
MANCOS … I
have to say, this is the second time I’ve been down to Mancos for a great party
and huge turnout of tykes and crones, steers and queers, and everything in
between – rural Colorado as it moves from red to blue. Some of this energy seems
to be La Plata County
spillover – Mancos playing Carbondale to Durango’s Aspen.
But some of it seems targeted to this rural pocket of Montezuma County,
with its back up against Mesa Verde and the San Juans in the distant north.
What used to be very conservative, predominately Mormon country, and has now
become a haven for alternative lifestyle folks from all over – Santa
Cruz to Abilene.
Absolute Bakery in Mancos |
Check out Zuma’s the next time you’re passing through on the highway, or
maybe make a little detour for breakfast at the Absolute Bakery.
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