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THEATER
Heidi Stillman & Looking Glass at Arden
Born
Yesterday Reborn in Philly
Azuka’s
“An Artist’s Workshop”
Terror at the White
House
ART
Components
of The Big Nothing
The
City of Murals
Moore
College Senior Show
NY
Times Art Critic William Zimmer at NAP
Fleisher
Challenge - Interdisciplinary Outlet
Highwire
Gallery - The Shovel Show
Photographer
Mike Mergen
Secret
Hangerbenderman: Abraham Rothblatt
MUSIC
The Decemberists at
TLA
Staying Up Late with
Stargazer Lily
Schacter and
Johnson: Jazz Improv
The Blue Journey of Monica
McIntyre
Mickey Roker at
Ortlieb's Jazzhaus
Eric Alexander at Chris'
Jazz Cafe
POETRY & PROSE
Open Hand
by
Frank Walsh Taxidermy
Becomes You by Maria DelVecchia
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"Just a Simple Place People Can
Read Their Work."
Art Sanctuary Resident Artist Trapeta B.
Mayson Hosts Open Poetry in Germantown
by Victor Thompson
"I'd make you guys some fish and rice, but it's late,"
Trapeta Mayson offered. Mayson was, in a deeper sense, offering all of
Philadelphia-- poets and listeners, her spiritual nourishment. But how
late was it, really?
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Trapeta Mayson |
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Despite her accomplishments, Monrovia Liberia-born poet Mayson
downplays the significance of her Germantown series. "I just hope
the readings continue. I don't think we're doing anything that much
different. I think the fact that we enjoy doing it, and [that] it
doesn't seem like a burden, [that] it's a place where people can come
and share their work." The Germantown Poetry Series, which Mayson
runs with the help of her friend Camille Edwards, happens on the second
and fourth Wednesday of every month. Mensa Anh Tchaas, who works in the
bookstore, sets up folding chairs in a space in the Nile Bookstore and
Restaurant.
"I do think that I need to commit more to get more people out,
so that we can keep it going, keep it at the venue, 'cause it's a good
venue, and it needs to be," Mayson stresses. Regarding the
difficulty of the location, "I think the Germantown area scares a
lot of people, not because of the location, but it seems out of the way.
It's not that much out of the way."
People begin showing up around 7pm. If only a few make it out-- as in
the case of a snow storm, the chairs might be arranged in a circle.
Mayson, speaking candidly, said, "In order for me to be
connected with something, whether two people show up or twenty people
show up, to me it just is. I try to keep it as pure as possible,
authentic, no pretensions- it doesn't matter. To me, you could have
written your poem last night in your room."
The 2002 Pew Fellow and 2000 Pennsylvania Council on the Arts Fellow
usually starts the evening with a poem by an established poet she has
discovered. Mayson has been a poetic institution in Philadelphia for
many years and has run several reading series before now. Resident
Artist at Art Sanctuary in North Philadelphia, Mayson has led poetry
workshops at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Franklin Institute and
the Germantown Women's Center in Philadelphia. She has performed in the
illustrious company of Sonia Sanchez and Nikki Giovanni.
Mayson speaking with modesty, added, "To me fifty percent of
being a writer is reading other people and studying people and all
different cultures, all different walks of life. And to be able to read,
to me, is the most important thing. And then to have your true voice.
But I've always tried to tell the truth in my writing, even if I look
back and I'm like, God that poem sucked. I never pretended or try to
twist my story around to fit with a mold. You might embellish maybe, all
our memories. You know, it's kind of weird."
Readers are invited in turn up to the mic to read a poem or two,
sometimes to sing a song. "Just the stage is sacred for you,"
advised Mayson, who added, "Feel safe. This is the only place where
you can go and feel safe and, you know, the people, even if they don't
understand what you're saying, [are] not going to sit there and go, oh
yeah at you, but… "
After everyone has had a chance to share, the reading starts over
again.
Mayson explained, "The poetry reading is important, and I think
Camille [Edwards] probably feels this way too, I would love for poets to
come through and feel safe, feel honored, feel that if I read Pabla
Neruda or if I read Maya Angelou. . . ." Edwards finishing the
statement, said, "You can come to the reading and do whatever you
feel on your heart."
By nine o'clock, it's time for a collaborative group poem. Everyone
offers a word and then another. One poet reads: "Puzzle hunt over
through picture blossom frame picture color tomorrow arrive on lavender
clouds soon."
"It was important for me to have that space because as a writer
who has been writing for a long, long time in the city and reading my
work , I went through a period of insecurities where I actually let it
bother me that, I would go to a certain reading and feel, I mean, my
material has changed over the years, because I've grown over the years,
but they haven't changed to adapt to fit into the whatever the pop
culture is or the mold. I used to write a lot about being a woman and
being an African woman in America and I still do write about that but I
write about it in a different way," said Mayson, who concluded,
"It's about my experience as an individual."
The Germantown Poetry Series happens on the second and fourth
Wednesday of every month at the Nile Bookstore and Restaurant, 6008
Germantown Avenue, just a few blocks north of Chelten Avenue. For more
information on Mayson's work with Art Sanctuary's programs visit http://www.artsanctuary.org.
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NEWS
Arts
and Culture Face the Mayor’s Veto
The
Barnes Finds Its Place
SPOKEN WORD
InterAct's
Writing Aloud
Art
Sanctuary Resident Artist Trapeta Mayson
Daughters
of the Diaspora
Alicia
McCarthy & Ben Smith: Artist Comedians
LITERATURE
James
Alan McPherson at Kelly Writer's House
Author
Lawrence Richette's Novel, The Secret Family
Notes
on Author Faith Adiele
CULTURE
Philly
Reuses It!
Shoba Sharma's
Naatya Dance Ensemble
Passional:
Deliciously Illicit
The
Photographic Art of David Lawrence
Art
Sanctuary Opened Center & New Play
Jay
Schwartz's Secret Cinema
COLUMNS
A Modern Girl's Guide
to Philadelphia
Fabric Sculptor J. Lauren
McCall
[UNDERGROUND SWELL]
It is Peace of Mind: Ananda
Ashram
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