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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20150406T183000
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SUMMARY:The Alphabet of Distant Harbours
DESCRIPTION:The Guild Complex continues a new reading platform to foreground Asian / American authors and themes. Curated by Dipika Mukherjee\, this spring’s program—The Alphabet of Distant Harbours—features Toni Nealie\, Zhou Sivan\, and Angela Narciso Torres. \n“The Alphabet of Distant Harbours’” will bring together writers who explore the suppression as well as expression of identity in the Asian diaspora. Zhou Sivan (also Nicholas Y. H. Wong) traces the secret lives of ‘M’ in his poems — Malacca\, the Malay Archipelago\, myth\, Maeterlinck\, mother and matter\, marriage\, Medusa\, misanthropes and misbehaving — in exquisitely wrought poetry. Toni Nealie\, who moved to Chicagoland from New Zealand\, raises questions about the shame and fear suppressed through generations and how they continue to manifest in her thought-provoking creative nonfiction. Award-winning poet Angela Narciso Torres will read from her significant body of work to explore the varying degrees of elasticity in the distances between continents\, families\, lovers\, memory and reality\, waking and dreaming\, while invoking her native Philippines and the various landscapes in which she has lived.” ~Dipika Mukherjee \nThis program is presented in partnership with the City of Chicago’s Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events\, and will be held in the Garland Room (first floor) of the Chicago Cultural Center. The programs is free of charge and open to the public. Arrive early to sign up for the open mic. \nClick here to RSVP and share on Facebook. \nABOUT OUR CURATOR \nDipika Mukherjee is a writer and sociolinguist. Her debut novel\, Thunder Demons (Gyaana 2011)\, was long-listed for the Man Asian Literary Prize. She lives in Chicago and teaches at Northwestern University. \n  \n  \n  \n  \nABOUT OUR AUTHORS \nToni Nealie was born in New Zealand. A former journalist\, she worked in N.Z. and the U.K. before moving to Illinois where she teaches and writes. She holds an M.F.A. in Creative Writing – Nonfiction – from Columbia College Chicago. Recent essays appeared in Guernica and The Prague Review. Her first collection of essays is forthcoming from Curbside Splendor. \n  \n  \nZhou Sivan was born in Malaysia. His poems have appeared in Asymptote\, The Salt Anthology of New Writing 2013\, Columbia Review\, The Rialto\, QLRS\, and Southeast Asian Review of English\, sometimes under the name Nicholas Y. H. Wong. He is pursuing his Ph.D. in comparative literature at University of Chicago and is managing editor at Chicago Review. \n  \n  \nAngela Narciso Torres’s first book of poetry\, Blood Orange\, won the Willow Books Literature Award for Poetry. Recent work appears in Pirene’s Fountain\, Cimarron Review\, Colorado Review\, and Drunken Boat. A graduate of Warren Wilson MFA Program for Writers and the Harvard Graduate School of Education\, Angela has received fellowships from the Illinois Arts Council\, Ragdale Foundation\, and Midwest Writing Center. Her poetry has received Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net nominations. Born in Brooklyn and raised in Manila\, she currently resides in Chicago\, where she teaches poetry workshops and serves as a senior poetry editor for RHINO. www.angelanarcisotorres.com \n  \n 
URL:https://guildcomplex.org/event/the-alphabet-of-distant-harbours/
LOCATION:The Chicago Cultural Center\, 78 E Washington St. 
CATEGORIES:Special Events
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20150417T174500
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20150417T201500
DTSTAMP:20260425T082842
CREATED:20150309T155857Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150403T185102Z
UID:2955-1429292700-1429301700@guildcomplex.org
SUMMARY:The Wall of Respect and People’s Art Since 1967 Symposium Opening
DESCRIPTION:The Guild Literary Complex joins the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and other partners in a symposium launch event tonight to honor and discuss the legacy of the Wall of Respect. The Wall of Respect and People’s Art Since 1967 is a symposium (April 17-18) that launches a two-year critical conversation on the Wall of Respect that leads up to the mural’s 50th anniversary in 2017. \nIn the summer of 1967\, during a time of political turbulence\, the visual artists of the Organization of Black American Culture (OBAC)\, together with muralist William Walker\, painted a group mural on the South Side of Chicago. Known as the Wall of Respect\, the highly visible community artwork celebrated black heroes\, served as a platform for performance and rallies\, and engendered a sense of collective ownership within the neighborhood\, inspiring community mural movements around the US and the world. \nThis symposium invites the artists to revisit their creative political acts and to reflect on the Wall’s legacy in a public conversation. To see a full schedule\, click here. \nToday’s opening program will be held in the Nichols Trustees Suite of the Art Institute of Chicago’s Modern Wing. The keynote address will be presented by visual artist Wadsworth Jarrell\, and the evening will include poetry\, music\, and more. Speakers for this opening event include: \n\nHaki Madhubuti (Founder and Chairman\, Third World Press)\nWalter Massey (President\, School of the Art Institute of Chicago)\nSiddha Weber (artist\, poet\, musician)\nSherae Rimpsey (poet\, MFAW Candidate at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago)\n\nFree and open to the public. Registration is required. Seating is limited and on a first come\, first served basis. To register\, please contact Drea Howenstein at ghowen@saic.edu or Sonja Falke at sfalke@saic.edu. \n 
URL:https://guildcomplex.org/event/wall-of-respect/
LOCATION:Art Institute of Chicago\, Modern Wing\, 159 E Monroe St\, Chicago\, IL\, 60603\, United States
CATEGORIES:Special Events
ORGANIZER;CN="Guild Literary Complex":MAILTO:info@guildcomplex.org
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