YOU ARE INVITED TO A SURPRISE PARTY

(Undisclosed Location)

YOU ARE INVITED TO A SURPRISE PARTY

FOR WHOM?
“NOBODY!”

WHERE?
WE CAN’T TELL YOU.

WHEN
? December 9
TIME? 5 pm.
IT SOUNDS LIKE A PLAN! COUNT ME IN!

I’m Nobody! Who are You?
Are you–Nobody–too?
Then there’s a Pair of us?
Don’t tell–they’d advertise –you know!
How dreary to be Somebody!
How public–like a frog–
To tel one’s name the Livelong June
To an admiring–Bog!
That’s Emily Dickinson, and she was right, they WILL advertise,
and what’s more, become a mob, a Flash Mob, to an admiring bog,
that’s us! We’re celebrating a so-called “nobody” who became a big celebrity from tapping
into everybody’s inner nobody. We’re disturbing the peace with words of poetry honoring
the woman who lived her life unknown as a poet, “shut up” and “shut out” of public life.
We’ll bring her to the streets!
When? December 9th, 5 pm, the eve of Emily Dickinson’s birthday.
We can’t tell you where because a Flash Mob breaks out of the ordinary public rhythms, surprising everyone, but we’ll give you some clues.
Look for sightings of Nobody, wearing purple boots and white clothes for the woman who dressed
only in white and expressed herself in “the purple well.” Look for a seating place on which a famous literary creation waxed
philosophically about chocolate (“my momma said, life is like a box of chocolates). Look for a street, or “row,” where our region’s own Nobel Prize author wrote a book with a title that is a BIG CLUE to where this Flash Mob celebration of Emily Dickinson’s birthday is happening! (hint: you can hear seals bark!)
YES, Gingerbread will be served!
YES, Poetry will be recited!
This Flash Mob (shhhhh) is brought to you by Team Poetry, for the Poet in Residence of Pacific Grove, with Barbara Mossberg (“Dr. B), and students of CSUMB and PGHS, under the direction of Mr. Larry Haggquist and the Poetry Out Loud program.
COME ONE COME ALL! COME ON, and bring your favorite “NOBODY!”
Interview with Barbara Mossberg:
Emily Dickinson lived her life in basic seclusion, if not exile. In her lifetime she was virtually unknown as a poet.
Yet she yearned to be famous, to be immortal, to matter utterly to us, to be “great, Someday,” as a poet. She knew she was considered
a “nobody” and she defiantly took on that identity with pride and panache! She created a whole identity and poetry of such
distinction and singularity that she became one of the greatest poets in the English language, beloved around the world. How delicious to celebrate her celebrity, her fame, with a mob, disturbing the peace! To an “admiring bog!” And to have a crew of Nobodies saying her most famous words. She is no longer “shut up,” “shut out.” She is part of fabric of our daily lives, her words the spiritual soundtrack to how we live and think about life most profoundly.  Her joys and sorrows and insights into the largeness of life will be expressed on the sidewalk, in the plaza, on the street, on a public bench . . . Yes–in public!

ARTISTS’ AND POETS’ WORK WANTED FOR EXHIBIT I READ THE NEWS TODAY, OH BOY

ARTISTS’ AND POETS’ WORK WANTED FOR EXHIBIT
I READ THE NEWS TODAY,  OH BOY
JUNE 22 – JULY 29, 2011
Marilyn O’Rourke Gallery, Benicia Public Library150 East “L” St., Benicia, CA 94510

ARTISTS AND POETS WILL BE PAIRED
TO CREATE WORK REACTING TO A NEWS ARTICLE OF MUTUAL INTEREST

INTERESTED?
How to Apply:

VISUAL ARTISTS:  Please submit five representative JPEG images of your work. Work need not be related to news. Include a paragraph statement of your interest and general artistic background; highlights will do. Please include in this the category of news that most interests you. A list of general possibilities will be found in the white box.
Email complete contact information (Name, Mail Address, Email Address, Phone Number, Cell Number) to:
saturate@mac.com    Subject line: I READ THE NEWS
Artists selected will be asked to create a SINGLE 2D piece of art based on a news article. Media might include but is not limited to painting, printmaking, photography, mixed media . Finished pieces can not be larger than 50”x50” framed. They will be displayed with a poem that is written about the same news event and the original newspaper article.

POETS: Please submit five representative poems. Poems need not be related to the news. Include a paragraph statement of your interest and general artistic background; highlights will do. Please include in this the category of news that most interests you. A list of general possibilities will be found in the white box.
Email complete contact information (Name, Mail Address, Email Address, Phone Number, Cell Number) to:
saturate@mac.com    Subject line: I READ THE NEWS
Artists selected will be asked to create a SINGLE poem, 40 lines or fewer based on a news article. Poems will be displayed with a visual piece of art about the same news event and the original newspaper article.

Politics
Environment
Business
Human Interest
Domestic Affairs
Sports
Arts and Theatre

PROCEDURE:
Interest Applications DUE: FEB. 12, 2011
Accepted artists will be contacted by email by FEBRUARY 28, 2011
12 Poets and 12 Visual Artists will be paired by Poet Laureate of Benicia, Ronna Leon, and a Board member of Arts Benicia, Nikki Basch Davis.
Pairs will be given the contact information for the Poet or Visual Artist they have been paired with. If possible, they will be encouraged to meet together to select an article they will create around. Details and suggestions for this process will be supplied to accepted artists and poets. Poets and visual artists will work alone but in reaction to the same newspaper article of their selection.
Questions? Call:Ronna Leon, 707 746-5597

Upcoming Event! Febuary 15, 2011

Dr. Mossberg

Professor Barbara Mossberg:
“We know writing is transformational for the writer, but for the world, the real world? Cultural data from earliest recorded history shows literary arts transforming social, political, civic, and environmental dimensions of our lives for war and peace and civil and  human rights.”

Dr. Mossberg believes that [writing] has the power to change the world. That conviction helped earn her the position of poet in residence for the city of Pacific Grove.