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Olson 100 is here!
The Charles Olson Society of Gloucester in collaboration with many local partners has organized more than a dozen events to commemorate the one hundredth anniversary of Charles Olson's birth. Contact the society at jcgloucester@hotmail.com.
Monday, December 27, 2010
Happy Birthday Charles John Olson
Earlier this evening I read "An Ode on Nativity" & conjured Olson's Worcester in my Gloucester kitchen. I also read Donald Wellman & Kenneth Warren's essays on Olson in Warren's House Organ & found myself imagining a host of panel discussions that have not yet happened & few that for temporal & spatial reasons could not happen. Later this evening a cast of characters -- I will not be among them -- will read Olson poems to each other at the Rhumbline, a bar across from Gloucester depot.
G'night.
skål & sláinte,
James Cook
Friday, October 8, 2010
Breaking Olson 100 News
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Tuesday Night: Peter Anastas reads Peter Anastas & David Rich reads Jonathan Bayliss
Tonight the words of Olson's friends Peter Anastas and Jonathan Bayliss will be celebrated at the Sawyer Free Library at 7 p.m. Map here.
See you tonight.
Friday, October 1, 2010
Olson 100 events this weekend
I just wanted to remind you of three important events this coming
weekend. PLEASE TELL AS MANY OF YOUR FRIENDS AS YOU CAN ABOUT THESE
EVENTS!
On Sunday afternoon at 1 p.m. at the Ellery House on 245 Washington
Street, State Senator Bruce Tarr will present a proclamation from Gov.
Duval Patrick naming October Arts and Humanities month. This event
coincides with the Charles Olson Centennial. I will be there and it
would be great to have some other members of the Olson Society present.
You will also have a chance to view the installations of Olson-inspired
art by painter Susan Erony and photographer Paul Cary Goldberg, who also
designed the Olson Centennial poster.
At 4 p.m. at the Cape Ann Museum, on 27 Pleasant Street, there will
be a reading, reception and book signing for Dave Rich's new book,
"Charles Olson: Letters Home," a collection of letters from Olson to
various Gloucester residents. I've seen the book and it is marvelous.
At 7 p.m. Ammiel Alcalay will read from his new novel "Islanders" at
the Bookstore of Gloucester, 61 Main Street. This is an extraordinary
novel and I hope as many of us as possible can turn out to support
Ammiel, who has been an incredible help to us in planning and organizing
the Olson Centennial.
Peter
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Maximus Walk Route
View Larger Map
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Charles Olson Centennial Opens with Five Nights of Readings
Gloucester’s Charles Olson Centennial Week, October 3-10, will open with five evenings of readings at three separate locations. Each reading begins at 7 p.m. They are free and open to the public. The schedule is as follows:
On Sunday, October 3, poet, novelist and CUNY Graduate Center professor Ammiel Alcalay will read from and sign copies of his recently published novel “Islanders,” at the Bookstore of Gloucester, 61 Main Street. Alcalay grew up as a summer resident of Rocky Neck in the 1950s and early 60s, with Charles Olson as a close friend of his parents, painter Albert Alcalay and his wife Vera. He has written extensively about Olson and his childhood memories of Gloucester.
Of his novel “Islanders,” published by City Lights Books, the LA Times wrote: “Atlantic islands, Northeastern U.S. fishing towns, the last years of the Vietnam War: Ammiel Alcalay flies over this time and these places. .. Memories emerge, and from the memories, stories. The placement of details on the pages is stunningly simple.”
On Monday October 4, a group of local poets calling themselves "The Usual Suspects,” will read from their own work at the Gloucester Writers Center, 126 East Main Street. Readers will include James and Amanda Cook, Kent Bowker, Schuyler Hoffman and other local talents. These writers have been inspired by the work of Charles Olson and the school of writing which formed in the 1960s called “The New American Writing,” of which Olson was a major influence. They will read from their work and discuss it with participants. Parking for the Gloucester Writers Center is across the street in the East Gloucester Marina.
On Tuesday, October 5, Gloucester natives Peter Anastas and David Rich will read fiction and non-fiction inspired by Charles Olson at the Gloucester Lyceum and Sawyer Free Library. Anastas will read from a recently completed memoir, “From Gloucester Out,” and his forthcoming novel, “Decline of Fishes,” also set in Gloucester. Rich will read from the fiction of the late Gloucester playwright and novelist Jonathan Bayliss, including excerpts from Bayliss’ posthumous novel “Gloucestermas,” due for publication this fall.
On Wednesday October 6, the Gloucester Writers Center, located at the former home of poet Vincent Ferrini, will host a second evening of readings featuring works by Olson's friends and fellow poets, Vincent Ferrini and Linda Crane. A highlight of the evening will be the presentation of unpublished work by Crane. Readers will include Sarah Stotzer, Joanna Bowker, Jo-Ann Castano, Carol Weston, Peter Anastas, Dorothy Nelson, Elizabeth McKim, and Fred Dewey.
On Thursday, October 7, poets Gerrit Lansing and Charles “Chuck” Stein will read from their work at the Bookstore of Gloucester, 61 Main Street. Both poets were close personal friends of Olson’s and each has paid tribute to Olson in poetry and prose. Lansing’s most recent book is “Heavenly Tree, Northern Earth,” published by North Atlantic Books. Stein is the author of a major critical study of Olson, “The Secret of the Black Chrysanthemum: The Poetic Cosmology of Charles Olson.”
Friday, September 17, 2010
Olson 100 events in Gloucester
A special catalog and exhibition of rare, inscribed, and out-of-print books, letters, magazines and broadsides by Olson, sponsored and hosted by the Gloucester Lyceum and Sawyer Free Library (2 Dale Avenue) & curated by Greg Gibson of Ten Pound Island Book Company.
Related Exhibitions
Cape Ann Museum, 27 Pleasant Street
Gloucester Maritime Heritage Center, 23 Harbor Loop
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8
Memorial Service for Paul Sawyer
Friday, October 8, 3:00 p.m.
The Independent Christian Church (10 Church Street)
Marathon reading* of poems by Olson and by poets affected by Olson
readers include Ed Sanders, John Landry, Kristin Prevallet, Donald Wellman, Carol Weston, Michael Kelleher, Ricardo Cazares Grana, John Galloway, Jonathan Skinner, Christopher Rizzo, Michael Peters, Fred Dewey, Dale Smith, Ruthanne (Rufus) Collinson
Friday, October 8, 7:00 p.m., Independent Christian Church (10 Church Street)
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9
Children's program, including Henry Ferrini reading Little Charlie Goes to Gloucester
Saturday, October 10:00 a.m., Cape Ann Museum
Moderated "Town Meeting" Discussion:
"Remembering Olson" moderated by Peter Anastas
Saturday, October 9, 10:30 a.m., Cape Ann Museum
Moderated "Town Meeting" Discussion:
"Olson's Project" with Charles Stein, Kristin Prevallet, Fred Dewey, and Kate Tarlow Morgan moderated by Ammiel Alcalay
Saturday, October 9, 1:00 p.m., Cape Ann Museum
Henry Ferrini and Ken Riaf's Polis is This: Charles Olson and the Persistence of Place*
Saturday, October 9, 3:00 pm, Cape Ann Community Cinema (21 Main Street)
Reading featuring Diane di Prima & Michael Rumaker*
Saturday, October 9, 7 p.m., Independent Christian Church
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 10
Maximus Walk with readings
Readers include Kevin Gallagher, David Rich, Henry Ferrini, Peter Anastas, Jim Cocola, Carol Weston, John Galloway
Sunday, October 10, 11 a.m., Downtown Gloucester
(meeting place Cape Ann Museum)
Click here for route.
Olsonian Performances*
Sunday, October 10, 3 p.m. Blackburn Performing Arts (Main Street)
3:00 p.m. Blue Suit, performed by Kate Tarlow Morgan and Ammiel Alcalay
3:30 p.m. Olson's Apollonius of Tyana, performed by Sarah Slifer, Mark Wagner, and others
4:15 p.m. Musical performance by Willie Alexander
Farewell party and reception
Sunday, October 10, 5 p.m. Alchemy (3 Duncan Street)
All events free and open to the public. Donations of $5 are suggested for events marked with an asterisk*.
Completed Events
THURSDAYS BETWEEN LABOR DAY & COLUMBUS DAY
Charles Olson Study Group
(9/9, 9/16, 9/23, 9/30, 10/7) at 7 p.m. at The Bookstore
(61 Main Street) led by Peter Anastas and James Cook
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2 & SUNDAY, OCTOBER 3
Contemporary Art Installation
The Man Who Loved Gloucester by Susan Erony
The Big O by Paul Cary Goldberg
Saturday, October 2 from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Sunday, October 3 from 1:00 to 4:00 p.m.
White-Ellery House, 245 Washington Street
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 3
Charles Olson: Letters Home, Book Signing
Reading and reception with the book's editor David Rich
Sunday, October 3 from 4:00 to 6:00 p.m.
Cape Ann Museum, 27 Pleasant Street
Ammiel Alcalay reading from Islanders
Sunday, October 3 at 7:00 p.m.
The Bookstore of Gloucester, 61 Main Street
MONDAY, OCTOBER 4
"The Unusual Suspects": Rufus Collinson, Amanda Cook, Schuyler Hoffman, Kent Bowker, James Cook and others read their work
at 7:00 p.m.
Gloucester Writers Center, 126 East Main Street
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5
Peter Anastas reads his work & David Rich reads the fiction of Jonathan Bayliss
at 7:00 p.m.
Sawyer Free Library, 2 Dale Avenue
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6
Celebration of the work of Vincent Ferrini and Linda Crane
at 7:00 p.m.
Gloucester Writers Center, 126 East Main Street
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7
Gerrit Lansing & Charles Stein read poetry
8:00 p.m. (after the study group session)
The Bookstore of Gloucester, 61 Main Street
Olson 100 Sponsors
Galen Gibson Scholarship Trust
Ten Pound Island Book Company
Gloucester Writers Center
Toad Hall Bookstore
Dogtown Book Shop
Mystery Train Records
The Bookstore of Gloucester
Cape Ann Museum
If you would like to become a sponsor of Olson 100 please contact The Charles Olson Society of Gloucester at jcgloucester@homtail.com
Become a member of the Charles Olson Society of Gloucester
By becoming a member you will be helping to support our efforts to organize events to celebrate the Charles Olson centenary.
Followers
Peter Anastas, Charles Olson, Vincent Ferrini
Gloucester Writers Center
turned into a center where artistic activities could be shared with the community. Today this idea is very close to becoming a reality.
Plans are progressing to establish The Vincent Ferrini Writers Center at 126 East Main Street, in Gloucester, Massachusetts. This former home of Vincent Ferrini (1913-2007) lies across the harbor from Charles Olson’s (1910-1970) 28 Fort Square home. These two poets, known as the consciences of our city for over half a century, wrote about Gloucester with enlightened passion and energy. Organizers of this project believe it is only fitting that a place that honors their work and keeps their vision alive be established.
Since Ferrini’s death Paul Sawyer, an old friend of Vincent’s who lives in California, has been advocating for the purchase of the house. This spring, Sawyer, a Unitarian-Universalist Minister, called Vincent’s nephew filmmaker Henry Ferrini to report that he has Pancreatic Cancer and has been given a year to live. With that time he wanted to put his energy toward helping to create a Vincent Ferrini Writers Center at Vincent’s East Main Street studio. The poet’s nephew was moved by Paul’s decision.
“Paul’s decision has motivated so many people close to Vincent, Charles and Paul to work to make this a reality,” Ferrini said.
To date the group has raised $23,000 and hopes to raise ten times that amount during the upcoming year. This would enable the organization to own the house outright,
repair the building and begin to develop programs for the site, including public readings, writing workshops and residencies for local and visiting writers.
According to Ferrini, the timing for this project could not be more perfect.
“This year is the Centenary of Charles Olson’s birth,” he says, “and attention is focused on the poet.”
The group hopes that by October when Gloucester celebrates Olson’s centenary the project will be up and running, presenting programs, providing a writer’s retreat and
functioning as one of the most innovative educational and cultural organization in the city.
Tax-deductible contributions for the establishing of the Center can be made to the Charles Olson Society and sent to Henry Ferrini, 5 Wall Street, Gloucester, MA 01930.
