Poetry Parnassus – a treasure trove of poetic delights

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By Anita Sethi

“Parnassus is the mythical home of Orpheus, and we’re trying to recreate those foothills here in the Southbank. The idea is to convene a global coming together of poetry and poets using the Olympics as a convenient device for that.  There’s all kind of reasons it seems to fit, including the whole idea of Olympic values – this will be a non-competitive version of that. It is a celebration of poetry as the oldest form of writing. London is renowned for being an international city. There are people of almost every nationality living in this city”.

So said Poetry Parnassus curator Simon Armitage when I interviewed him last year  and how rapidly the year has sped by for Poetry Parnassus is now just two days away and will see history made at the largest international gathering of poets the world has seen.

 There is also an interesting interview with Simon Armitage in today’s Observer in which he describes the international diversity of poetry:

“The only constant is language, but whether and how it is written, spoken or sung changes enormously”.

There is indeed an incredible diversity of events on offer at Poetry Parnassus. On Tuesday there will be a “Rain of Poems”,  100,000 poems by over 300 contemporary poets from 204 countries falling from a helicopter over Jubilee Garden at sun set. Throughout will be the  Poetry Bench, the Poetry Takeaway, and Poems on the Underground (all free) – it certainly looks to be a treasure trove of poetic delights from around the world.

 ’It is a happy thing that there is no royal road to poetry. The world should know by this time that one cannot reach Parnassus except by flying.’  - Gerald Manley Hopkins.

Although we might not have wings, this gathering of poets is sure to be an uplifting experience.

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Happy World Poetry Day

undefinedBy Anita Sethi

Celebrating 45 years of Enitharmon Press – An evening with Carol Ann Duffy, Simon Armitage, Helen Dunmore, Michael Longley and Seamus Heaney. 

“We know we have to fight for small poetry presses; this is a world in which we have to fight for everything we hold dear – including the NHS”, said Helen Dunmore to rapturous applause in the Queen Elizabeth Hall, in three hours of powerful poetry readings about both political and personal issues. On the evening of World Poetry Day, an illustrious group of poets – Carol Ann Duffy, Simon Armitage, Helen Dunmore, Michael Longley and Seamus Heaney – gathered to celebrate Enitharmon Press’s 45th anniversary, Enitharmon the name that William Blake gave to a character representing spiritual beauty and the inspiration of the poet.

“As poets we are always echoing each other, so it is very good to read together on the stage”, said Dunmore, in a haunting selection of poems, including one commissioned for the 200th anniversary of the abolition of slavery, about forcing women to become property, inspired by Browning’s Last Duchess.  ‘I owned a woman once’ is a recurring phrase, darkening with the sinister line: ‘Sometimes I had to punish her’.  Poignant poems about being haunted by lost loved ones infiltrated the evening, which was also haunted by the ghost of literary influences, from TS Eliot to Michael Donaghy.  It was not only literary but musical influences which filtered through the readings.  “Ever fallen in love with someone you shouldn’t have fallen in love with?” asked Simon Armitage, a line from The Buzzcocks, in a selection of poems by turns hilarious and heartbreaking.

“We should not take poetry for granted in these fickle times”, asserted Michael Longley, who read moving war poetry inspired by the death of his soldier father when he was barely twenty.  Bereavement was a theme that had opened the evening, with Carol Ann Duffy reading a chillingly beautiful poem about the death of her mother, the recurring world “cold” particularly striking after the first warm day of Spring this year.

Seamus Heaney read poems packed full of literary and natural imagery, from Troilus and Criseyde to a submerged reference about Orpheus losing what he loves when he looks back, to the lovely lingering image of a peacock’s feather. The evening wound to a close with a marvellous rendition of his poem ‘Quitting Time’ from the anthology ‘District and Circle’, and with the uplifting image of a kite soaring skywards.  The three hours of delightful poetry reinforced that it is definitely something worth fighting to keep alive.

William Blake dreamed up the original Enitharmon as one of his inspiring, good, female daemons, and his own spirit as a poet-artist, printer-publisher still lives in the press which bears the name of his creation. Enitharmon is a rare and wonderful phenomenon, a press where books are shaped into artefacts of lovely handiwork as well as communicators of words and worlds. The writers and the artists published here over the last forty years represent a truly historic gathering of individuals with an original vision and an original voice, but the energy is not retrospective: it is growing and new ideas enrich the list year by year. Like an ecologist who manages to restock the meadows with a nearly vanished species of wild flower or brings a rare pair of birds back to found a colony, this publisher has dedicatedly and brilliantly made a success of that sharply endangered species, the independent press.’Marina Warner

The Spring Season

undefinedBy Anita Sethi

The daffodils have nudged their way out of the earth and the sun is straining over the River Thames.  Despite the cold, Spring is upon us and and there are plenty of Literature and Spoken Word events to look forward to. My highlights include:

Nadine Gordimer

I recently chaired the Southbank Centre Book Club on Nadine Gordimer’s 2001 novel The Pick-Up and the response from attendees was phenomenal, with discussion ranging far and wide, from the content of the novel which is set in post-apartheid South Africa and explores the complex relationship between the two protagonists Julie and Ibrahim, to the disjointed style of the novel itself, which switches perspectives, and makes for a challenging read.

On Wednesday 14 March 2012, 7:30pm Nadine Gordimer talks about her life and literature in the first of a series of events with Index on Censorship, which focuses on the continuing importance of free expression across the world. Gordimer’s latest novel, published to coincide with this event, is No Time Like the Present.  She published her first novel in 1953, and has since gone on to publish short stories, plays and criticism in over 40 books, including The Conservationist, which won the Booker Prize in 1974.  Gordimer won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1991, and is widely recognized for her activism and for confronting moral and political issues in her writing.

* * * * *

New Maps for an Island Planet

Tuesday, 13th March 2012, 6:30pm

‘Join us for a discussion about the creation of new maps for navigating the complex challenges presented by global economic and ecological crises. The panel, consisting of geographer Doreen Massey, architect Carolyn Steel, and campaigner and writer Andrew Simms draw on their own contributions to the publication ATLAS: Architecture, geography and change in an interdependent world. Poet Lemn Sissay also performs at this event, which is chaired by broadcaster Quentin Cooper.’

* * * * *

Celebrating Enitharmon Press with  Simon Armitage, Carol Ann Duffy, Helen Dunmore, Seamus Heaney, Michael Longley

Wednesday 21 March 2012, 7:30pm

In the words of Marina Warner, EnitSeamus Heaneyharmon Press ‘has dedicatedly and brilliantly made a success of that sharply endangered species, the independent press.’  In its 45-year history, Enitharmon Press has forged a singular mission as an independent publisher. Simon Armitage, Helen Dunmore, Seamus Heaney and Michael Longley read in celebration of a publisher that has printed their work.

* * * * *

 

 

Noo Saro-Wiwa and Chibundu Onuzo

22nd March 2012, 7:45pm

“Noo Saro-Wiwa and Chibundu Onuzo explore their native land of Nigeria through travelogue and fiction, sharing their stories of Lagos and beyond.

Saro-Wiwa’s activist father took her back to Nigeria each year when she was a child. In Looking for Transwonderland she journeys through a country of extreme contrasts, of eccentricity, kitsch and modernity, to become reconciled with her homeland.

Onuzo’s debut novel, The Spider King’s Daughter, explores the daring and unexpected love affair between Abike Johnson, from the elite of Lagos society, and a young hawker she meets from the city’s slums. The novel looks at the rifts and tensions in Nigerian society”.

TEN readings

Four poets read from their latest work in this special event to celebrate the TEN anthology. The poets’ diverse backgrounds, with roots in Bangladesh, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Ireland and Uganda, are united through their craft – powerful and moving contemporary writing, which speaks of Britain today.

The event is hosted by Bernardine Evaristo.

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Meet the Author: Simon Armitage talks to Anita Sethi

By Anita Sethi

www.twitter.com/anitasethi 

An uplifting day of poetry

A huge bouquet of balloons has just been released into the clear blue skies above the Southbank Centre when I meet for a chat with Simon Armitage, who is Artist in Residence at the Southbank where his various projects have included Poetry International; the Lion and Unicorn; Everyone Sang; and Poetry Parnassus. As well as being Professor of Poetry at Sheffield University, the prolific writer also has two books forthcoming over the next year.

Photo by Anita Sethi

On a special day celebrating creativity and freedom through a series of inspiring events called “Everyone Sang”, Simon Armitage gave a powerful reading alongside young members of theLion and the Unicorn project after which the balloons were released, hot-spots of colours floating upwards plastered with poems the young people wrote during a workshop day.  The balloons became tiny specks in the sky and then vanished from sight.

Simon Armitage reads at the balloon launch

During the afternoon, Simon Armitage  has been presenting the film and poetry of young people from refugee backgrounds around themes of peace and freedom, with the young poets reading alongside established poets Joelle Taylor, Karen McCarthy Woolf, Philip Wells and Yemisi Blake.

“The balloon release is a culmination of a project with young people; we’ve been using poetry as a creative process for young people to express themselves”,  explained Armitage.

“They walked into the room thinking it would be all doom and gloom and yet they had a lot of fun and joy. It shows the strength of the human spirit; and it’s about the irrepressible nature of the soul and language itself”

“I also had the idea that, depending which way of the wind was blowing, that the balloons might end up back in the country where the kids are from”. 

Armitage explains how they had to get clearance from air traffic control before the balloon release, but it was worth it, for the uplifting experience.  “It’s the idea of being free and an address to that idea of borders and boundaries”.  

Just as a balloon filling with air, poetry can help people’s confidence grow, the project proved, and help form the identity.

I wonder where the balloons might have floated to by now.  It’s the idea, says Armitage, that they may just drift, or that they may be picked up from a nobody living nowhere, that those poems might just find themselves in the hands of someone whose life might be changed in some small way from the words drifting their way.

Armitage points out that even if your poem might happen to reach all the way to the other side of planet Mars, it’s important as a poet to always retain your voice and write about the things that interest you, whether that voice is colloquial and local or global and symbolic.

Armitage also discusses the idea behind his brainchild, the visionary festival Poetry Parnassus, which will launch next Summer and see poets from all participating nations come together for a week of performances and talks. Click here to find out how to ‘nominate a poet’.

“Parnassus is the mythical home of Orpheus, and we’re trying to recreate those foothills here in the Southbank. The idea is to convene a global coming together of poetry and poets using the Olympics as a convenient device for that.  There’s all kind of reasons it seems to fit, including the whole idea of Olympic values – this will be a non-competitive version of that”.  It is a celebration of poetry as the oldest form of writing. Page image“London is renowned for being an international city”, he continues. “There are people of almost every nationality living in this city”.  Poets from  206 different countries have been invited to the festival.

As well as continuing his explorations into Le Morte D’Arthur, a project which has seen his translations of Sir Gawain and the Green Night being used in a Norton Anthology, Armitage is also working on a book about crossing the Pennine Way, a journey throughout which he would give readings in people’s homes.  “It was absolutely fantastic.  I met some really wonderful people. I was trying to use poetry as a currency.  It would get me from A to B.   I think that readings are part and parcel of the act of being a poet”.

Armitage also comments on the chunks of poetry which can now be found outside the Southbank Centre site.  “There’s something about small chunks of texts that people find uplifting”, he says, since reading them can offer “a little moment of intensity”.  He’s been working on a similar project, “Stanza Stones” through which poems have been etched into the quarries in Marsden.  It’s also “partly about giving something back”.

The most recent acclaimed collection of the prodigiously talented poet is called  Seeing Stars and in beautiful imagery comprises the inspiring idea of looking as far as you can see, and seeing the same old things in different ways.

As I walk through the sunlit day and glance up into the sky for the glimpse of any balloons, it’s certainly been a day of setting the sights far onto distant horizons.  Just as I turn my gaze downwards, a tiny flash of a red balloon floats past the vision then vanishes.

Freedom Released Tomorrow!

Lion and Unicorn Installation. Photo L.Apichella

Tomorrow: Join with Southbank Centre poet in residence Simon Armitage for a special day celebrating freedom and creativity – featuring a balloon release at 3pm.

‘Peace… is a Kebero played by two

hands in the centre of whispering sands,

that speaks of Eritrean sunrise.’

Frehiwat, Refugee Youth

The Lion and Unicorn installation by the entrance to Royal Festival Hall always has people talking. Each time I have been past this week young and old are looking with interest and compassion at the poems strung together to make a fluttering wall of verse. The installation was made by artist Gitta Gschwendtner working with 50 young refugees and asylum seekers and pays homage to a flock of ceramic birds in the original Lion and Unicorn Pavilion from the 1951 Festival of Britain. The young people’s poems – written and spoken – reinterpret the original themes of strength and imagination, of peace and of freedom.

Groups that took part in the project were: the Refugee Council, Refugee Youth, the Klevis Kola Foundation, and the Refugee Home School Support Project.

As a continuation of the ideas communicated in the instillation, join in tomorrow in celebration of these and other young voices during Everyone Sang, part of London Literature Festival:

Everyone Sang
Royal Festival Hall, Southbank Centre
Saturday 9th July  

10am – 12noon
Poetry workshop,
The Clore Ballroom
Free open workshop for all ages – drop in any time
Come and write your own bird poem of peace – poets Joelle Taylor, Karen McCarthy Woolf, Philip Wells and Yemisi Blake will be here to help you – and you can write in English or in your own language. Later at 3pm, your poem will take flight attached to a balloon!

1pm – 2.30pm
Young people’s poetry film and readings, The Clore Ballroom
Free, no need to book
Southbank Centre artist in residence and critically acclaimed poet Simon Armitage presents film and poetry from young people from refugee backgrounds around themes of peace and of freedom, alongside established poets Joelle Taylor, Karen McCarthy Woolf, Philip Wells and Yemisi Blake

3pm – 3.15pm
Balloon release, Festival Pier, Queens Walk
Free, no need to book
Poems written in the morning’s workshop will be released attached to a flock of balloons led by Simon Armitage and young people involved in the Lion and Unicorn project

To see a short film about the installation here.

For more information on the event.

Plaintive blessings…

So…
I thought I wanted to start this in a really cheesy way. You know, the old ‘guess who’s back, back again’ thing. Then I remembered I was blogging on behalf of a proper like serious establishment (don’t get upset about my colloquial language peeps; it’s poetic). You may, (and yet are unlikely too) remember me blogging during this year’s London Literature Festival. I love Southbank Centre – that’s Southbank Centre and not The Southbank Centre because that would just be wrong – so blogging for this year Poetry International Festival is an honour.

And so to business. On Monday, I went to see Philip Gross with Simon Armitage. I will openly admit now, that I had never heard of Philip Gross. I know it’s like suicide, I know it’s like I’ve let a bomb go off, but if nothing else it’s the truth. It was my deep rooted affection for Armitage’s work, cemented in me from the age of 15 when I first encountered Hitcher in my GCSE AQA Anthology that drew me to the event. So, I can honestly say I had no idea what to expect. So, he’d won the TS Eliot Prize last year, so what? I’ve learnt better than to judge any artistic person on the prizes they win. I’m not saying that prizes are not significantly important, and as he pointed out significant for the writer’s self-satisfaction. I just believe that you’re only as good as people feel you are. Getting prizes for this therefore seems peripheral. Anyway, away from this tangent…

…Yet, when I sat down and heard that the theme for that night’s event was Landscape and Place, I found myself suppressing an inward groan. I could not imagine, even with my limited knowledge, how anyone possibly could have an original approach to such clearly concrete themes? Yet, as I listened to him read his work, I began to realise that his approach invites these aforementioned concrete ideas for the abstract concepts to stand tall and proud on. It was all very clever. No, it was far more than clever, it was natural, ‘So little thinking of its own beauty’.

He talked endearingly but briefly of his father and their relationship, and the Estonian tradition of ‘not saying’ which he saw as an endowment in some ways. This was evident in his work, which I liked. In fact, there was something about his whole manner which held the unassuming air of ‘not saying’. I only wish I could find the poem which he chose not to read. This silent anticipation is what I believe kept us all gripped throughout the event, despite the themes first appearing highly dull.

One of the last things he said, ‘I don’t think you can teach anybody to be a great writer’ left me in an inner struggle. Perhaps, he’s right. I’ve often felt this is the case. However, does that exclude poets who write poetry, terrible or not, from being considered as real poets? It’s a thought-provoking quote, and one I will chew on for the rest of the festival, for your pleasure.

Philip Gross read from The Water Table, I Spy Pinhole Eye and Off Road To Everywhere and the event was hosted by Simon Armitage, a Southbank Centre Artist in Residence.

I must say(I really must) I found the event highly inspirational, and wished I had know about Philip Gross long before so I would have know what to ask when it came to the Q&A. Only the typical student poverty which currently plagues me stopped me from buying at least one of his books. Out of the night came this strange little piece. Now I’ve set myself a challenge – I intend to put this poem and any poem I write inspired by the festival in a strange place in SBC by the end of this festival. I’m not sure what place yet, but you will see soon. In the meantime, enjoy:

Resonant Space

…Freefall
Dryness
Quietness
Reflection
Knowing
Far more
Small
Worlds
Dreams
Moment
Uniqueness!
Silence
Precious?
What a state?
Resonant space…

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