Playing the Changes: a reading
by poets DURIEL E. HARRIS, A. B. SPELLMAN, and RONALDO V. WILSON
co-presented and curated by
The Poetry Center at San Francisco State University
$5-10 sliding scale donation (no one refused for lack of funds)
Whether by “PLAYING THE CHANGES,” “WORRYING THE LINE,” OR OTHERWISE “TROUBLING THE WATER,” experimentation and play are ways in which accepted modes of expression within the African American literary tradition have been challenged. In this regard, the poets will discuss their approaches to innovation, including the role of music, popular culture, visual art, and politics in the development of their individual poetic practice.
Between 1975 and 2005, Spellman worked at the National Endowment for the Arts, first as the Director of the Expansion Arts Program and, for the last decade of his term, as Deputy Chairman. In recognition of Spellman’s commitment and service to jazz, the NEA created the A.B. Spellman NEA Jazz Masters Award for Jazz Advocacy. Additionally, the Jazz Journalists Association voted to honor Mr. Spellman with its “A Team” award, and he received the Benny Golson Award from his alma mater, Howard University, for his service to jazz.
Ronaldo V. Wilson is the author of Narrative of the Life of the Brown Boy and the White Man, winner of the 2007 Cave Canem Poetry Prize (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2008) and the forthcoming, Poems of the Black Object (Futurepoem Books, 2009). He is a graduate of U.C. Berkeley, NYU’s Creative Writing Program, and he recently defended his Ph.D at the CUNY Graduate Center. Wilson has held numerous fellowships to include the Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center, Djerassi, and Yaddo. He currently teaches creative writing and African American Poetics at Mount Holyoke College, and is a founding member of the Black Took Collective. Photo: Ronaldo V. Wilson, by Dallas W. Bauman III.giovanni singleton is founding editor of nocturnes (re)view, a critically acclaimed journal dedicated to experimental work of artists and writers of the African Diaspora and other contested spaces. She is a recipient of a New Langton Bay Area Award Show for Literature and her work has appeared in Fence, mipoesias.com, Chain, Five Fingers Review, Callaloo, Beyond the Frontier: African American Poets for the Millenium, and on the building of Yerba Buena Center for the Arts.
PLAYING THE CHANGES is supported by San Francisco Arts Commission Cultural Equity Grants, Grants for the Arts/Hotel Tax Fund (City of San Francisco), the Luggage Store Gallery, and the Poetry Center, San Francisco State University