Showing posts with label Kingston University. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kingston University. Show all posts

Thursday, 20 March 2025

National Gallery Poetry Lates - Writers Kingston

Stewart Lee


Lily Ferret
Zara Auckbarallee
Stewart Lee
SJ Fowler

National Gallery
Trafalgar Square, London WC2N 5DN
14th March 2025

A remarkable project which allows Kingston University students and guest poets to write new performance works about paintings in the National Gallery, supported by curator Joseph Kendra and WK director SJ Fowler. Performed to full and generous audiences during the Friday Lates program, this is a perfect example of how Writers Kingston provides Kingston University students with a chance to engage with opportunities at world respected institutions and large audiences.

Zara Auckbarallee

For centuries, the artforms of painting and poetry have been in dialogue, with each informing the other, or attempting to translate what makes them unique as their own media into another. Poet and performer SJ Fowler has pioneered this gallery project with new ekphrastic poems, chosen from the National Galleries world renown collection, offering alternative interpretations of their meaning, history and standing. 

SJ Fowler

The audience join the hundreds of late night gallery goers as they wander the rooms of the National Gallery. Invited guests from Writers’ Kingston, students and staff from Kingston University, as well as further afield, wander from painting to painting experiencing the poetry performances in front of the chosen artworks.

Lily Ferret



Tuesday, 26 November 2024

The Kingston Camarade - Kingston University Town House

 

Matthew Sokulsky and Cameron Wade

Writers Kingston event #82 :
The Kingston Camarade

November 21st 2024 - Kingston University Town House 

Brand new performative and literary collaborations, made for the night. The Camarade is a dynamic event model, asking pairs of poets, writers, artists and other creative practises to come together and explore the potential of collective innovation and playful experiment. This time staff from Kingston University, students and alumni, from a wide range of backgrounds and specialities, present their new collaborative live works with colleagues and other invited performers. 

Harper Stringer and Tye Rajapura 

Featuring Martin Dines and Nicola Field / Cameron Wade and Matthew Sokulsky / Caitlin Nugent and Bella Weerasinghe / Safia Kamel and Marcia Knight Latter / Oscar Rodriguez and Sinnead Singson / Eleanor Wilders and Danica Ignacio / Harper Stringer and Tye Rajapura / Lily Ferret and Zara Auckbaraullee / Nick Foxton / Steven J. Fowler.

Nick Foxton

Nick Foxton is lecturer at Kingston University where he teaches a final year special study in 'Environment and Literature'.

Nicola Field and Martin Dines

Martin Dines is a lecturer in English Literature at Kingston University. His research interests are focused on two areas: the place of the suburbs in Anglo-American writing; and gay and lesbian culture and politics, and particularly, the interconnections between national identity, space and sexuality. 

Nicola Field is a writer, researcher, artist and socialist activist who has lived in south London for 30 years. Her creative, political and arts writing have been published widely and her book Over the Rainbow is published by Dog Horn Publishing. Her painting, drawing, ceramics and video have been exhibited at spaces across London including the BFI Southbank and the V&A.

Steven J. Fowler

Steven J. Fowler or SJ Fowler (born 1983) is a contemporary English poet, writer and avant-garde artist, and the founder of European Poetry Festival. His work has become known internationally for his "innovation in the field of live literature". Concerned with the potential of liveness, as opposed to the traditional poetry reading, his repertoire spans a diverse range of experimental practices, including improvised talking performances, action painting and pugilistica.

Safia Kamel and Marcia Knight Latter


A number of the poets performing at The Kingston Camarade (November 21st 2024) have published pamphlets with Sampson Low as part of the Writers Centre Kingston series. These included MOLD by Oscar Rodriguez, The Book of Matthew by Matthew J. Sokulsky, I Smell Metal by Cameron Wade, Smrt by Safia Kamel, RAMBLINGS EXTERNAL by Marcia Knight-Latter, and most recently moral cavity by Danica Ignacio.
https://sampsonlow.co/wck-pamphlets/

Sinnead Singson and Oscar Rodriguez

Oscar Rodriguez is a Salvadoran American poet based in Kingston. Avid writer since childhood, his migration to London for studies was a manifestation of resilience. Their poetry reflects on trauma, religion, identity, and queerness. He collaborates with Writers Kingston frequently and in the past with Spotify Radar. 

Bella Weerasinghe and Caitlin Nugent

Lily Ferret and Zara Auckbaraullee

Eleanor Wilders and Danica Ignacio



Monday, 18 December 2023

Football and Literature - Writers Kingston


SJ Fowler and Jules Sprake

Jules Sprake and SJ Fowler
Tom Jenks
Peter Dunkley and Ian Brady
Matt Sokulsky
Marcia Knight Latter
Julia Rose Lewis
Safia Kamel

Kingston University Town House
Courtyard Space
12th December 2023

Matt Sokulsky

The game of games, the great game, the beautiful ball game - a night of weird and heartfelt literary celebration! Writers of all kits shared poetry, fiction, non-fiction and performance on the world’s most popular sport, in all its facets, from the abstract to the obvious. With local and visiting writers alongside students and staff of Kingston University, it was a memorable night in the RIBA award winning Town House in Kingston. 

Marcia Knight Latter and Julia Rose Lewis

This event will also saw the launch of the collaborative poetry pamphlet, by Sprake and Fowler, A Seasons of Seasons from Sampson Low publishing.
https://sampsonlow.co/2023/12/12/a-seasons-of-seasons-sj-fowler-jules-sprake/ 

A Seasons of Seasons

A unique document in experimental poetry that celebrates the bone deep passion and pain football inflicts upon its followers. Written ostensibly to follow the turbulent 2022 / 2023 premier league season from the perspective of two lifelong fans of Crystal Palace and Everton respectively, A Seasons of Seasons then spirals out in the mass language ether of the world’s most popular game. Unusual for it’s methodology as well as its content, dragging in British poetry revival stalwarts alongside Pier Paolo Pasolini, Roy Hodgson and Sean Dyche, this book is a fusion of poetry, found text, collage, illustration, redaction and ground up collaboration.

Tom Jenks

“Football, like poetry, is an artform that not so much encourages obsession as demands it. The back and forth between Fowler and Sprake perfectly captures this baroque particularity. Talking about football with a poet is usually like talking about tofu with a mountain lion: they know what it is, but they don’t see how it applies to them. So it’s a pleasure to read A Seasons of Seasons, a text, at last, for the intersection of the Venn diagram, perfect for a cold, wet Tuesday night in Stoke.”
Tom Jenks

 Ian Brady and Peter Dunkley
Julia Rose Lewis
Safia Kamel

Thursday, 8 December 2022

Stephen Watts Celebration - Poetry


Stephen Watts



Writers Kingston event #58
December 6th 2022 

Town House Building
Kingston University

Celebrating the work of Stephen Watts

Cristina Viti

Stephen Watts, simply put, is one of the UK’s most extraordinary, influential and respected poets of the last forty years. His remarkable works, and his commitment to his writing, stands as an example to generations of poets that follow him, in his beloved London, and beyond. To mark the publication of Journeys Across Breath from Prototype Publishing, which gathers all of Watts’ published works between 1975 and 2005 – as well as a number of unpublished pieces appearing for the very first time – this event celebrates his works and life through readings by the poet himself and his peers. https://prototypepublishing.co.uk/product/journeys-across-breath/ 

Rory Cook

With readings from Stephen Watts, Cristina Viti, Rory Cook, SJ Fowler, Adriana Diaz Enciso, Chris Gutkind, Dominic Jaeckle, Vicki Kaye.

Adriana Diaz Enciso

In addition this event celebrates the continued brilliance of Sampson Low, our publishing house partner at Writers Kingston.. The work of the press has bolstered the careers of dozens of students and local writers since we began our partnership with them in 2018 and continues on, thankfully for us, into 2023. To represent the press, launches from Lucy Furlong and Martin Wakefield. https://sampsonlow.co/wck-pamphlets/ 

Lucy Furlong

Lucy Furlong - Amniotic City
11 years after its first publication, Lucy Furlong revisits Amniotic City in a series of new explorations, once again poking her nose in the nooks, passageways and liminal spaces therein. She discovers new terrain and new stories in this second edition of her poetry map.
https://sampsonlow.co/2022/10/13/amniotic-city-lucy-furlong/

Martin Wakefield

Martin Wakefield - Emptpy Poems
“Martin Wakefield’s ravishing sequence of ‘Emptpy Poems’ is elegant, spare and haunting. And haunted. The spectral traces of Apollinaire’s poems are still just visible beneath Wakefield’s enigmatic creation. There seems to be a strange attraction between the poems on the surface and the ghost poems beneath such that, in places, the surface poems shiver into italics to mirror the font change of the trace poems. Sometimes this becomes an ‘interference’ caused by the spectral poems, mysteriously pushing at words within the poems above, or pulling them into new spellings, compressions and splittings. This resonates powerfully with the operations of the mind itself and how it responds to the energies and interruptions of its memories, its subconscious, and its physical embodiment, as well as reflecting on the way all language is similarly shaped and inhabited by ghosts.” — Susie Campbell
https://sampsonlow.co/2022/12/06/emptpy-poems-martin-wakefield/

Chris Gutkind


Vicki Kaye

SJ Fowler

Dominic Jaeckle

Tuesday, 22 March 2022

Sampson Low Student Pamphlet Launches - Writers' Kingston Poetry

Stanimir Dimitrov

Sampson Low Student Pamphlet Launches
14th March 2022
Town House Building : Courtyard Venue, Kingston University, UK

Kayona Daley

Writer's Kingston Pamphlets
man/ia – Stanimir Dimitrov https://sampsonlow.co/2022/03/15/man-ia-stanimir-dimitrov/
AQUA & LUNA – Kayona Daley https://sampsonlow.co/2022/03/15/aqua-luna-kayona-daley/
Smrt – Safia Kamel  https://sampsonlow.co/2022/03/15/smrt-safia-kamel/


Safia Kamel

Designed to evidence the remarkable contemporary and innovative poetry being written by current and recent Kingston University Creative Writing students, this series of beautifully designed pamphlets each features a suite of poems, most often on one theme or in one style, by a solo author. The series mark the first publications of many poets who are very likely to be significant presences on the UK scene and beyond in the coming years.
www.writerskingston.com

Readings from Kingston students past and present

Julia Rose Lewis

Julia Rose Lewis
is the author of Phenomenology of the Feral (KFS 2017) and co-author with James Miller of Strays (HVTN 2017).  Miscellaneous is her fifth pamphlet after: Zeroing Event (Zarf 2016), Exhalation Halves Lambda (FLP 2017), How to Hypnotize a Lobster (2018), and Archeology and the Beast (Luminous Press 2018). 
Review of Miscellaneous

Marcia Knight-Latter

Marcia Knight-Latter
is a poet and writer. She studied Creative Writing with Psychology at Kingston University. She published the pamphlet Ramblings External with Sampson Low in 2019 and has performed her poetry at venues such as Rich Mix, Rose Theatre and The Museum of Futures.

Ariel Bertelsen

Ariel Bertelsen
is an Icelandic writer, with Spanish background, living in London.

Richard Howson

Readings from The Book of Penteract
by Teo Eve, Susie Campbell, Chris Kerr and SJ Fowler

SJ Fowler

THE BOOK OF PENTERACT presents our biggest project to date - a 200 page, full-colour, hardback anthology featuring 45 of the most exciting poets currently working in the fields of constrained, formal, and visual poetry. This is a casebound edition, with a striking red ribbon bookmark and black and red head and tail-bands.
https://penteractpress.com/store/the-book-of-penteract 

Chris Kerr

Susie Campbell

Teo Eve




Tuesday, 30 November 2021

European Poetry Festival 2021 - Swedish Poetry

Simon Tyrrell (left) and Freke Räihä (right) 

Kristian Carlsson & Stephen Emmerson
Pernilla Bergland & Colin Herd
Anna M. Svensson-Stoltz & Maria Celina Val
Freke Räihä & Simon Tyrrell
Agnieszka Studzinka and Fiona Larkin
Nina Fidry, Sophie Shine and Emily Baldwin
Katerina Koulouri 
Introduced by SJ Fowler

November Thursday 25th 2021
Town House Building : Courtyard 

SJ Fowler

Visiting contemporary Swedish poets presented brand new performance collaborations with British-based counterparts, made for the night to a packed out audience at Kingston University’s RIBA award winning Town House. Students of Kingston University also presented new collaborations to support the visiting poets / Supported by the Swedish Embassy UK.

https://www.europeanpoetryfestival.com/

Maria Celina Val (left) and Anna M. Svensson-Stoltz (right) 

The next Writers Kingston event is on December Tuesday 14th 2021 (7pm start), Town House Building : Courtyard Venue, Kingston-upon-Thames. Free entry. Including new performances from New performances and readings from Maria Celina Val, Lucy Furlong, SJ Fowler, James Knight, Silje Ree, Patrick Cosgrove, Nina Fidry and Marcia Knight-Latter.

There will also feature a performance by the sound poetry group The Popogrou Antichoir (Lucy Furlong, Ailsa Holland, Simon Tyrrell, Martin Wakefield, SJ Fowler, Patrick Cosgrove, Bob Bright, Lisa Blackwell, Chris Kerr, Bob T. Bright).

https://www.writerskingston.com/

Friday, 1 May 2015

The Simulated Real World - Kingston University

Alice
The knock on the front door echoed throughout the cold rooms of the Crime House and we all tensed in anticipation. Inside we waited for the nurses to enter and visit their patients, yet this wasn't a ward scene but one firmly placed in the community. What could be more ordinary than a leafy street in suburban Kingston-upon-Thames, although what was going on behind the closed doors was a series of teetering narratives not light-hearted Margo and Jerry tittle-tattle . Who knows how common these unravelling stories are, how often desperation creeps under the crack in the door or for those lives in disarray to be rebuilt piece by piece. This was a chance to see behind those ordinary doors and capture the individual worlds of three people.

Julia Pelle
This is my third and final year as artist-in-residence at the School of Nursing, Kingston University and St George's University of London. Previous years have seen me ensconced in a corner of the simulated mental health ward furiously capturing the drama in sketches and words. Today (01/04/2015) we had the chance to see students working in teams throughout a simulated weekend where patients/clients were rooted between the four walls of a house.

Sharon Putt
Alice was recently returning to the family home after a hiatus, the dynamic of husband and children creating a soap opera of instability; Julian was back in the 'real' world, desperately trying to survive without money and in a barren and inhospitable bedsit; Peter found himself in the care of his parents once again, trapped in a world dominated by the dubious reality of the internet.

Kevin Acott
The day started for the students in a lecture room with the promise of an emotional assault course to come. Lecturers Julia Pelle, Kevin Acott and Sharon Putt set the scene. "This is a proper home visit, you're really going to get it today!"

Mostly in couples and sometimes alone, the students made their way to the Crime House door. This house is usually used by Forensic science students who find themselves quite literally at the scene of the crime. One after another over the course of this simulated weekend (that in reality lasted but one day) each group of students had to visit their patient, assess, advise and help. They would then have a meeting with their counterparts who would be the next people to visit the patient. So it was both an exercise in being the person at the cutting edge of the situation but also the ability to move forward as a team. It meant as an outsider I observed and sketched 3 unattached narratives, like jumping across random pages of a novel.

Martyn Keen
The story I first opened would be a Dashiell Hammett, it is short and full of motivation. I am the detective, not the hard-boiled kind more soft and pliable in the hands of actor Jane who plays the role of Alice. With us in the room is Martyn Keen, the professional who is keeping any eye on proceedings. Our two students accompany Alice into the room but there is another presence here too. It is the room's elephant, who is the shadow of the past.

Alice is here in her house on a weekend pass, so this is a fleeting visit for her too. For the past five weeks she has been on a mental health ward. Alice hugs a child's toy, she rocks gently squeezing it's soft body with an intensity that would rid a lemon of not only its juice but its zest as well. Her voice wavers like a doll, it's as if someone had pulled the ringed cord at her back and her words rise and fall, changing in pitch and emotion.

Student - Olawumi Olatunde
The two students sit across from Alice, directly in her eye line, close but still giving her the space to breathe. There's a hysterical tinge to Alice's voice and they pick up on it immediately. "No, No I'm happy" Alice says, "When I'm upset I'm tearful. No I'm happy". There is talk about a 'chat' with her husband and it's the first shift that pulls the rug from underneath my feet and the elephant stirs again in the room.

Student Olawumi Olatunde asks if Alice has the 'urges' at the moment, and her colleague speaks honestly, helping Alice realise she is teetering on the verge of a 'manic phase'. Tears start to well in Alice's eyes and the most revealing words escape between her lips, "I'm worried they're going to find me out".

It is one of the finest interactions I have witnessed between student and patient. Martyn Keen thinks so too as he launches into a debrief, he tells the students "Alice was more honest with her nurses than she was with her husband or children". Alice is left alone and someone will be here to check on her progress in the days ahead.
Julian

The second visit is to see Julian (actor Nigel) who's numb bottom is aggravating him more than any mental rollercoaster. He has spent another night sleeping on the cold linoleum of his bedsit. Money is an issue and the support that he should be a receiving is a safety net which has more than one hole in it.

Isaac
The students who have to unpick Julian's problems are Isaac and Maddie. They have been proceeded by colleague Danny who has already made Julian promises, for who wouldn't. Julian's situation is heart-breaking, the room is bare, a tin of beans and bottle water sit beside him, the fireplace is boarded up and there's no discernible signs of heat.

Harvey Wells
Isaac and Maddie are caught in the same Groundhog Day as Julian. They go through a check list, making sure their patient is safe but unfortunately not changing his immediate dilemma, there is still no furniture and no money for food. There is a genuine frustration and sympathy for all the people concerned because the 'system' is a tanker of behemoth proportions that doesn't change course easily, let alone in these choppy financial waters.

The impasse is best illustrated in this short exchange. Isaac asks "If we sorted out all your problems out would you feel better?" and Julian replies "Of course." Then after a long pause he adds "You can help me by helping me".

Harvey Wells is overseeing this exchange in his role as facilitator and the pursing of his lips is only interrupted by a pensive tap of his pen before it makes another note in his book. Time is the winner, the turgid second hand ticking variety. The minutes that stick in Julian's room barely escape the firmly shut door nor permeate the condensation that lines the window. It is not just the maze of mental health that makes Time move slower but also the inability to sit on a sofa or watch the TV. Small comforts that we take for granted.

Peter
My third and final chapter was a much more animated affair. Peter is back at home with his parents and there's enough tension between father and son to inspire a Greek tragedy. Conspiracy theories are rife, the internet as we know is a fountain of knowledge but in Peter's hand it is starting to fuel his fears and insecurities.

David Condon
The man who has to help Peter is student David Condon, and he has to decide how much fuel he wants to add to Peter's fire. He is determined to dominate this exchange, he is fluid and forceful, never scared and very impressive. David is a terrier, never letting go of the conversation and yapping at Peter's heals until he relinquishes a ball to chase down.

David Tracey
David has decided that Peter's conspiracy theories aren't to be indulged for too long but by curtailing these conversations he's cutting down on the information he needs. It is a balance of listening, thinking ahead and deciphering the past. It is a skill that is developed in simulations just as this, and it is one you can't help but admire.

Under the gaze of facilitator David Tracey it is David our student who makes the gesture that catches me by surprise. It is the difference between being on the ward and out here in suburban London. David needs to get Peter out of this environment, even it's only for a few hours, away from the addictive conspiracies and the volatile father son dynamic. Rather than a solution constructed of words David offers one made of actions. He will go with Peter himself, out there beyond the boundaries of this secure bedroom and into a world full of permutations which are ready to trip them both up. It is also a world that offers support and friendship, the first steps will be physical, taken together, while the latter ones will be navigated by Peter alone.

AL.