A note on : Dathini Mzaziya - article on musidrawology

Dathini Mzayiya : the sound of the mark as it comes into being - a new short article I wrote on the groundbreaking asemic / visual poetry of South African artist-poet Mzayiya and his musidrawology. On the brilliant journal Herri, also based in SA https://herri.org.za/10/steven-j-fowler/

an excerpt “As long as humans have been making marks that echo writing, and the miraculous instinct we have to write and record in language, they have been doing the same with the sound of language. So from scribbles and doodles, and primal scripts, to pictograms, ideograms, logograms, to structuralist explorations and alphabets we don’t understand to lost languages, and hoaxes, we also can trace the mutterings, utterances, diddlage, scatting, chanting and other abstract non-song, non-speaking vocal expressions of human beings. There is then, a distinct poetic artistic tradition from the dawn of human culture which engages the non-linguistic but language-evoking in both marks and sound. What is the profundity then of a work that engages both?

In the written artworks of Dathini Mzayiya we encounter work of the mark that remembers the sound of that mark. It takes us into every scratch we have made on paper, even every strike our fingers have made on keys. It brings us to the sound of chalk on a board, quill on parchment, or stone on stone. Of the rhythmic incidents of writing, of the sonic consequence of our desire to make our words. Its brilliance lies in its individuality, its particularity, offering us such timeless universality. It reminds us we need not be in service to the word in order to write, and beyond that, there is another potential – that we might listen beyond the word, as it comes into being.”

A note on : Brian Catling celebration on August 31st

Brian Catling, a guide for me and so many others in a tradition. I performed at Candid arts on the evening of Saturday August 31st for a huge program of celebration for his work curated by Richard Marshall. https://www.3-16am.co.uk/blog/30th-31st-august-brian-catling-event

A note on : Poem for Roy Fisher on Blackbox Manifold

Roy Fisher’s poetry has been a great influence on my work, and never too far away from me. I read him closely writing a few collections, most recently How do you do in devon, out in 2023.

I was asked to contribute to a memorial collection of poems in memory of Roy Fisher by Peter Robinson, whose introduction to the selection is here https://blackboxmanifold.sites.sheffield.ac.uk/issue-32/peterrobinsonprefacebm32

My poem https://blackboxmanifold.sites.sheffield.ac.uk/issue-32/stevenfowlerbm32

And the issue features friends Allen Fisher, Robert Hampson, Caleb Klaces, Geraldine Monk, Robert Sheppard and the late Alan Halsey https://blackboxmanifold.sites.sheffield.ac.uk/

European Poetry Festival 2024 : Event #10 - Liverpool

https://www.europeanpoetryfestival.com/liverpool24 A finale to remember. Travelling up on a boiling hot day when England were playing in the Euros, on a saturday, in Liverpool town centre. We got a great crowd, filled out the afternoon and the quality of the collaborations were really rangey and playful. Some people left during a sound poetry duo, which was both understandable and a badge of honour. Tom Jenks and I took on our 12th live collaboration, stretching back to 2012 I believe, maybe earlier. This time, subbuteo, live, with in game commentary and VAR technology.

European Poetry Festival 2024 : Event #9 - Norwich

https://www.europeanpoetryfestival.com/norwich24

Relocated to the forum due to the election happening in dragon hall, the audience was massive all the same. The packed out place saw some great live works, mostly from local poets, showing how rich the poetry culture is in Norwich, and visiting Czechs and Norwegians. I had the chance to work with Matthew Gregory, whom I’ve known for well over ten years. He is such a brilliant poet, and such a laugh to work with. Our piece was made close to the performance and came out really well.

European Poetry Festival 2024 : Event #7 - Latvia

https://www.europeanpoetryfestival.com/latvia24 A great event to add to the annals of Latvian celebrations at the fest. They are so great to work with, and again the Latvian poets visiting really threw themselves into the spirit of collaboration. My own personal favourite live work of the fest too, again with Krisjanis Zelgis, our fourth. He is so brilliant, and this was a performance I was proud of, that seemed to really resonate with people

European Poetry Festival 2024 : Event #5 - Sweden

https://www.europeanpoetryfestival.com/sweden24 amazing night at hundred years gallery in hoxton. our hosts graham and monse were typically lovely and personal and set the tone. it was a gathering, all sweaty down in the basement. some brilliant collaborations, and i had a grand time as ever before improvising something with benedict taylor

European Poetry Festival 2024 : Event #4 - Kingston

https://www.europeanpoetryfestival.com/kingston24 my students did me proud, as did many friends from the collective im a part of - popogrou. a really energised night down in kingston, it lifted me up, gave me an energy boost early in the process of a big fest, which can drain early. i had the chance to work with maria barnas again, whom i admire, and is such great fun. we went full meta sneaky on people and many bought it

European Poetry Festival 2024 : Event #3 - Switzerland

https://www.europeanpoetryfestival.com/swiss24 the big swiss at rich mix, the fest’s home from home. some really fun works in amidst some heavy hitting. i had a bit of fun with creature gifts as my poet partner couldnt make it last minute.

European Poetry Festival 2024 : Event #2 - Flanders

Standing room only on a sweltering night in central London at the Flanders house welcoming Flemish poets to London. An especial pleasure to work with the folk at Flanders Literature, Patrick Peeters, and at Flanders House, Bart Brosius, Jeroen Deckmyn et al. We had fun putting the event on, and the hospitality supported 10 great readings and performances, including many new collaborations, including Ruth Lasters and Vanessa Onwuemezi, Peter Verhelst and Eley Williams, Annemarie Estor and Laura Davis. All the performances are online https://www.europeanpoetryfestival.com/flanders24

European Poetry Festival begins! Event #1 - Catalan Poetry

We kicked over the European Poetry Festival 2024 at the National Poetry Library with a Catalan poetry celebration as Anna Gual and Rushika Wick, Martí Sales and James Wilkes, Laia Carbonell and Mischa Foster Poole presented new live collaborations. Magic support from Chris McCabe at the library as ever before, and exceptional was the enthusiasm and encouragement of Ramon Llull staff members Marc Duenas and Joan de Sola, who were there cheering us on with a sold out audience. All the performances are online https://www.europeanpoetryfestival.com/catalan24 alongside with some great photos by Pau Ros

A note on : Final National Gallery event of 2024, on Boucher and Constable

Three brilliant evenings in 2024 at the National Gallery Lates where I’ve had the chance to write and perform new poems on paintings in the collection, and then invite another poet writer, and some of my students, to do the same. I was joined by Elaine Mitchener, Caitlin Nugent, Holly Appleby and Eleanor Wilders, and I read on paintings Pan and Syrinx by François Boucher and Cenotaph to the Memory of Sir Joshua Reynolds by John Constable. The audience was really sizeable and really generous. This was an exceptional all around effort, and a perfect way to cap off six commissions of this kind. Thanks go to Fiona Alderton and Joseph Kendra https://www.stevenjfowler.com/nationalgallery

The full event here with all readings.

A note on : Shaldon Zoo reading on May 22nd

If you happen to be in Devon, tickets for my first reading at Shaldon Zoo, as part of my residency, are available now https://shaldonwildlifetrust.digitickets.co.uk/event-tickets/55487?catID=54246&

It will happen on May 22nd, at 5.30pm and then again at 6.30pm, and I will be joined by Ellen Wiles, David Spittle and Amy Cutler. A pretty grand lineup. Here’s more info on my residency www.stevenjfowler.com/shaldonzoo and I will reading poems on Bintarongs and Slow Loris.

A note on : Ireland - European Poetry Festival

Had a great time in Dublin and Newbridge in Kildare, running an event with Christodoulos Makris and thanks to Riverbank Arts Centre and County Kildare Arts, which led me to meet some brilliant new poets. All the videos here https://www.europeanpoetryfestival.com/ireland24

I got to work with Nick Roth, for the third time, and much spinning was had.

European Camarade - Ireland: May 2nd 2024 Riverbank Arts Centre, Newbridge Celebrating collaboration and literary performance, this unique event brought European poets to Newbridge, to present brand new collaborations, made for the night, with Irish counterparts.

European Poetry Festival 2024 : program announced

June 19th - July 6th
www.europeanpoetryfestival.com/2024

The EPF returns this summer with a dozen free events, as poets from nations across our continent, and across the UK, come together for one of the grandest celebrations of European poetry ever to take place in Britain. Celebrating collaboration, literary liveness and cross-linguistic inventiveness, our events at National Poetry Library, National Centre for Writing, Rich Mix, Kingston University Town House and more, are renowned for their energy, community and dynamic performative originality. This year the festival will be visited by poets from Catalunia, Flanders, Switzerland, Sweden, Austria, Latvia, Norway and many other nationalities, and the festival will once again be entirely collaborative, with new works presented as premieres, made, for the events, by visiting poets and their UK-based counterparts. 

A note on : Trio with Charles Hayward and Benedict Taylor

Benedict Taylor and I have been collaborating consistently in an improvised duo over the last two years. It is Benedict, his experience as an improviser, and his understanding of the live environment, and his introduction of me to his contemporary improv music scene world, who has been a key figure in me going down a new road with performance. When we last worked together, at the farewell to Iklectik Artlab, the room was filled with really excellent musicians. One of them was Charles Hayward, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Hayward_(drummer) a legendary drummer, and performer, improviser, who has an interest too in experimental vocalisation. He invited Benedict and I down to Lewisham Arthouse, where Charles is a custodian, to do a trio. Just back from Japan, and on a rainy night in South London, it was an atmospheric experience for me, meeting loads of new people, and they seemed interested in what I do, it seeming new in the music context. Charles and Benedict and I did two sets, two acts, the first for me a talking poem, and the second a found text mash. Just a fun thing, responsive, playful, alive, and good for it being un-neat and open.