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BLACKOUT POETRY WORKSHOPS AT THE DALLAS MUSEUM OF ART

Friday, June 24th, 2011

dallas museum of art dallas museum of art

I had the pleasure of leading a couple of blackout poetry workshops at the Dallas Museum of Art last weekend. It’s still a huge thrill for me to see a whole room full of people of all ages and backgrounds making art in the same space. I’ve found that folks really don’t need much instruction—they just need materials, some space, some time, and permission to play.

dallas museum of art

On Saturday, I led an all-teen workshop of 15 students. We worked on poems, and then we went into the galleries to soak up some inspiration. I showed them some pieces I liked and talked about how I look at art in museums and how I look at art in general. One thing I said to them is that it’s one thing to feel something about a piece of art, it’s another thing completely to be able to express it in words. Sometimes you can’t explain why you like a piece, and that’s okay.

dallas museum of art dallas museum of art

I carried an iPad around with me, and as we were looking at the work, I’d pull up a few of my blackout poems to talk about the work in context. At a Mondrian, I talked about color and grids. In sculpture, we talked about subtraction. Etc.

In the Reves collection, which displays the Reves’ collection as it was originally displayed at their villa, I talked about my experiences with 20×200 and collecting art, and how art doesn’t just hang in a museum—it’s something you live with in your everyday life.

dallas museum of art dallas museum of art

Thanks to all the great people at the Dallas Museum of Art for having me. I love teaching, and I love talking about art, so this was a real treat.

dallas museum of art

See more of the museum’s photos on Flickr ?

NEWSPAPER BLACKOUT AT THE AUSTIN MUSEUM OF ART

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

Newspaper Blackout at The Austin Museum of Art

I was pretty thrilled when The Austin Museum of Art asked me if I wanted to do a Newspaper Blackout event. We got to display a mini-exhibit of originals and prints, and I led a 90 minute blackout poetry workshop. It was a great time, and we had a terrific turnout.

Newspaper Blackout at The Austin Museum of Art

Newspaper Blackout at The Austin Museum of Art
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Newspaper Blackout at The Austin Museum of Art

Newspaper Blackout at The Austin Museum of Art

Newspaper Blackout at The Austin Museum of Art

Newspaper Blackout at The Austin Museum of Art

Newspaper Blackout at The Austin Museum of Art

More photos on my Flickr and AMOA’s Facebook page.

Here’s some video Anne Heller (@annevid) shot of the talk:

Big thanks to AMOA and everyone who showed!

NEWSPAPER BLACKOUT RELEASE PARTY AT BOOKPEOPLE

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

newspaper blackout release party at bookpeople

I can’t think of a nicer way to cap a release day than with a successful release party in your home town bookstore, so thanks a million to BookPeople, to my wife Meg for baking her delicious chocolate chip cookies,  and to the 50+ folks who came out on Tuesday night! Y’all are the best.

See a bunch of photos from the event on Flickr.

I started things off with a short slideshow about how I started making the poems:

newspaper blackout release party at bookpeople

And then I went into a little demonstration of how they’re done. Here I am quoting Allen Ginsberg in “A Supermarket In California“:

newspaper blackout release party at bookpeople

And here I am explaining how I think of the poems as “Word Find” puzzles we used to do as kids in elementary school:

newspaper blackout release party at bookpeople

After that, Bookpeople hooked everybody up with a marker and a newspaper, and we all set about playing:

newspaper blackout release party at bookpeople

newspaper blackout release party at bookpeople

newspaper blackout release party at bookpeople

I was really stunned by how focused everybody was, and by how many people offered to stand up and read their blackout poems for the group. It was truly awesome.  You can read some of the poems over on the Newspaper Blackout Tumblr.

newspaper blackout release party at bookpeople

After that, it was time to sign some books:

Again: thank you thank you thank you to everyone who came out! It was such a gas to see y’all with markers and newspapers in hand.

For those of you outside of Austin, we don’t have many national dates planned yet, but I’m hoping that will change, so stay tuned.

UPDATE: Thanks to Eric Gomez for this really nice writeup of the event:

What stayed with me most was the fun I had. He was right: it was less like work and more like play, a kind of word search for buried humor, hidden wisdom, or laconic lament. Finding that right note of self expression might take more than a little practice however. Kleon has blacked out hundreds and hundreds of these poems. His experience is telling. I struggled with my article and then he mentioned with the timeliness of an oracle that it’s tough to write one from a political column. He finds that the articles from the “Arts or Sports sections are best.”

Austin Kleon has gained a fan not merely because of his down-to-earth and quietly erudite personality, but because the poems he has “found” buried within newsprint are poetical gems in their own right.

BLACKOUT POETRY WORKSHOP AT ANGELO STATE

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

BLACKOUT POETRY WORKSHOP AT ANGELO STATE

Last week Meg and I drove out to San Angelo, Texas. My friend Laurence Musgrove had invited me out to Angelo State to give a talk to a poetry class and conduct a blackout poetry workshop. The idea was to have a kind of “warm up” presentation to get ideas for any book tour I might do. This is the first time I had done anything like this, and how it went far exceeded my expectations. The students were great: they were engaged, eager, and they asked awesome questions. (Laurence posted a great Flickr set of the workshop – the photos in this post are his.)

Below I’ve posted the complete slideshow:

Here I am hating on Microsoft Word:

BLACKOUT POETRY WORKSHOP AT ANGELO STATE

Here’s how the workshop went:

  • I taped newspaper broadsheets to the walls and gave everyone a marker
  • We formed a line, and I started by circling one anchor word or phrase
  • The next person in line was instructed to build off that anchor phrase
  • We kept going until poems emerged

BLACKOUT POETRY WORKSHOP AT ANGELO STATE

BLACKOUT POETRY WORKSHOP AT ANGELO STATE

BLACKOUT POETRY WORKSHOP AT ANGELO STATE

The challenge, as always, was to get the students circling concrete nouns and verbs — words that put images in the head.

This combo made us all chuckle:

BLACKOUT POETRY WORKSHOP AT ANGELO STATE

We only had a half hour or so, so we didn’t get any finished poems, but I promised everybody I’d go home and see what I could get out of the work we started. I’ll post the results here when I get a chance.

Thanks to Laurence, Angelo State, and all the great students!

I’m hoping we can do more of these workshops after the book comes out.