Rounding out January's features for GLOW's Sister Spit 2020 edition is librecht baker!
librecht baker is the author of vetiver (Finishing Line Press), an English Professor, and a Sundress Publications' Assistant Editor. She was part of The Vagrancy’s 2018-2019 Playwrights’ Group and Eastside Queer Stories Festival 2019 and 2017. baker has attended Ragdale, VONA/Voices, and Lambda Literary Writer’s Retreat. she has a MFA from Goddard College. Her poetry appears in Solace: Writing Refuge, & LGBTQ Women of Color, Bone Bouquet (Issue 8.1), Sinister Wisdom 107, and other publications. Baker's play, "Lineage Undone," was awarded Top Performance in the "Top Papers and Performances in Performance Studies" category at Western States Communication Association’s 89th Convention. What compels you to write? Writing is my path and life long practice. It’s the one way I contribute to our world and collective dialogues, focusing on the personal and communal. Beyond my personal drive, I feel compelled by my Egun and living lineage to add to what has been previously created and built to fortify it more. Too, I’m compelled by my Black culture and Diaspora, conversations, adding/balancing the grief seen and experienced, other folk's art, curiosity, blissful feelings, and other fantastical things. What upcoming writing projects are you working on? I'm collaborating on a couple projects, but there is no information that I'd like to share about them. Aside from those, my one act play, "Afterlife or Bust," will be produced in Q Youth Foundations' Eastside Queer Stories Festival 2020 at La Plaza de la Raza Theater in Los Angeles in May. Describe your work in five words. My writings are Black (as in people, culture, an experience, uplifting, matter, etc.), an altar/alter, celebratory, and an affirmation. What are some of your artistic influences/inspirations? This is the worst and difficult question for me to answer because I'm always under the influence, and when I'm influenced, I effort to say a name and/or put a label on it to remember and/or acknowledge. Some influences include Noah Purifoy's artwork in Joshua Tree, West African drum and dance culture, too many writers' work, such as Adelia Prado's The Alphabet Park, Black Quantum Futurism: Theory & Practice by Rasheedah Phillips, Anastacia Renee's (v.), Harriet A. Washington's Medical Apartheid: The Dark History of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans from Colonial time to the Present, Ching-in Chen's The Heart's Traffic's, and N.K. Jemisin The Broken Earth Trilogy for example, Karon Davis’ visuals, traditionalist and remixers, tricksters of language, "Hoodrat to Headwrap: A Decolonized Podcast," hummingbirds in the Ann Star Magnolia trees outside, spirit/spirituality, Marcia Jones' "Displaced Oshun Theory," the ocean, calathea lancifolia, coffee, and an ongoing oscillating list of stuff. Kicking off 2020's GLOW Queer Artist feature is Ananya Garg!
Ananya Garg is a South Asian lesbian, poet, and spoken word performance artist. She sees her creative practice as a community practice whether she writes in a circle or alone with her pen. Ananya has performed in Tasveer's 2018 Yoni Ki Baat, directed by Uma Rao, Tasveer's Subcontinental Drift, and Yoni Ki Baat 2018 in San Francisco at the Tenderloin Museum. She has also appeared in the University of Washington's Womxn's Action Commission's "The ____ Monologues," Lavish: A QTPOC Arts Showcase hosted by the Q Center at the University of Washington, the Viva La Healing Conference at the Ethnic Cultural Theatre, and more. She has also read at Hugo House, Gay City, and featured with YouthSpeaks Seattle, Alchemy Poetry Series, and Amplifier. Ananya has taught poetry and art through the Asian Pacific Environmental Network in the Bay Area, and worked as an educator for the Seattle Freedom Schools. Why do you write? What compels you to write? I write for myself, my communities, and my ancestors. To quote Audre Lorde, "poetry is not a luxury. It is a vital necessity of our existence. It forms the quality of the light within which we predicate our hopes and dreams toward survival and change, first made into language, then into idea, then into more tangible action." I write because I must. It is my survival. Describe your work in five words. Raw, longing, urgent, curious, still. Artistic influences/inspirations? My queer ancestors whose memories were erased by the violence of British colonialism but live on in my body. The brown queer elders in my life and the brown queer futures. Turning the spotlight to our other Sister Spit artists, we have the magical Creatrix Tiara! You can help bring Tiara and other Sister Spitters on the road by donating to the Sister Spit fundraiser!
Creatrix Tiara works with creative arts & media, technology, games, community cultural development, and education to explore ideas around community, identity, liminality, belonging, and social justice. Tiara is very interested in exploring the ways that various mediums can be used to convey and support experiences of transience and flux while also building empathy and understanding for experiences and stories outside one's own. In 2018 Creatrix Tiara wrote, produced, and performed in their first full-length theatre show, Queer Lady Magician, exploring stage magic through a queer, feminist, decolonial lens. Tiara also performs and produces for LGBTQIA+ disability arts collective Quippings, was a Dandy Minion and Burlesque Dancer in the 2017 Melbourne Festival production of Taylor Mac's 24 Decade History of Popular Music, produced and performed for San Francisco South Asian women's theatre program Yoni Ki Baat, and has made work across US, Australia, and elsewhere. from the artist Describe your work in five words. Liminal, interdisciplinary, vulnerable, passionate, curious What are some of your artistic influences/inspirations? I'm a big Darren Hayes (ex Savage Garden) fangirl and he's pretty much why I'm an artist nowadays. Mama Alto is an amazing queer transfeminine non-binary POC jazz cabaret diva who also does a TON of work supporting Melbourne's queer/PoC/gender-diverse/indie artist communities - she's made SUCH a difference to my artistic career. Blake Maxam is a Bay Area-based stage magician who also does a lot of community advocacy as a queer trans woman - she's the one who got me back into stage magic and is such a sweetheart!! I'm also very influenced by the Internet and online culture - I've practically lived online since I was about 9 (as an older Millenial this was actually uncommon) and I probably wouldn't be alive, let alone thriving, without it. What upcoming writing projects are you working on? A lot of my writing projects nowadays aren't necessarily the traditional-publishing kind: I do a lot of work in writing for stage, games, and online media, amongst others. Amongst them, I'm working on sequel for my stage magic + storytelling + social justice show Queer Lady Magician (I'll be performing versions of the original show during Sister Spit!), playing with ideas of charm and manipulation, with the aim to produce not just a stage show but also an Alternate Reality Game narrative component around it, multidisciplinary project (writing + performance + VR +++) with a group of others from Muslim backgrounds exploring our relationships to Islam, mysticism, diaspora, Indigeneity, and identity, using archetypes like the Djinn, the Witch, and the Faerie, and a YouTube series explaining the stage magic references in the Ace Attorney games! This month we're shining our feature spotlight to our Sister Spit artists who will hit the road in SPRING 2020!
Mia S. Willis is a Black non-binary poet whose work has been featured by or is forthcoming in The New Southern Fugitives, FreezeRay, Narrative Northeast, Peculiar, Slamfind, and others. In 2019, Mia was named the first two-time Capturing Fire Slam Champion, a Lambda Literary Fellow in Poetry, the Young Artist Fellow at Chashama’s ChaNorth residency, and a collaborator in Forward Together’s Transgender Day of Resilience Art Project (tdor.co). Their debut poetry collection, monster house., was the 2018 winner of the Cave Canem Foundation’s Toi Derricotte & Cornelius Eady Chapbook Prize and is available with Jai-Alai Books. Connect with Mia on Facebook/Twitter/Instagram: @poetinthehat. from the artist Why do you write? What compels you to write? I write because silence is antithetical to the survival of my kinfolk. Describe your work in five words. Block party in a graveyard. What are some of your artistic influences/inspirations? The heady welcome of crab boil. A hallowed dancehall beat. Shit-talking across the spades table. Ashlee Haze. Imani Davis. Asia Bryant-Wilkerson. Ariana Brown. Lindsay Young. The metallic hum of hair clippers. A perfectly rolled blunt. My families, chosen and given. What upcoming writing projects are you working on? My first full-length poetry collection is nearing completion, so I am currently balancing its final revisions with background research for a new heroic crown of sonnets about my socio-cultural acquisition and embodiment of masculinity as a Black queer person. Corey Qureshi is a queer writer and musician based in Philadelphia. They work at an LGBTQ+ center and give drum lessons. When they aren't working or making things, they're busy being a young parent and loving it. They're Blue Stoop alumni and read flash fiction for Homology Lit. Find a list of published work at neutralspaces.co/q_boxo. Follow them on twitter @q_boxo.
from the artist Why do you write? What compels you to write? I've always loved books and've wanted to write one since I was a kid. Sometimes, I really want to talk about the thousands of small moments and things we feel but don't notice daily. Other times I write to bring awareness to the discomforts of working for unlivable wages. It's never easy being the only queer and/or nonwhite person in a space where you're forced to serve and please consumers (largely my experience). I want others in these circumstances to feel seen, cause most of the time we're just shamed for admitting it's a struggle. Also love, always love. Lauren Bullock is a queer Vietnamese and Black writer, performer, and teaching artist. Her work has appeared on AFROPUNK.com, The Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center, and more. She currently serves as a staff writer for Black Nerd Problems, poetry editor for FreezeRay Poetry, and crime-fighting costumed vigilante of many aliases. from the artist Why do you write? What compels you to write?
I've always been drawn to storytelling and crafting with words; I still have my earliest poem from kindergarten tucked away with every notebook and journal I've ever written in since. As someone with many different intersecting identities there's something soothing and powerful about not only being able to articulate my own narrative clearly, but finding threads that bind what can feel like disparate parts together. I also possess a deeply sensitive and intense personality (shout out to strong Scorpio placements), so I find that poetry in particular has been helpful in communicating my emotions without having to fear hyperbole. As far as compulsion, I've recently been relearning how to center myself as a motivator instead of outside sources (the need for representation, competitive deadlines, living up to an imagined ideal, etc). It's a slower process, but I think it's been necessary in forming a healthy relationship to my art in a hypercapitalist system that emphasizes production for production's sake. I want to be moved by a flow, not caught by a current. Thea Matthews is a poet / scholar / activist born and raised in San Francisco, CA. She earned her BA in Sociology where she studied and taught June Jordan’s Poetry for the People. She writes on the complexities of humanity, grief, and resiliency. She has work in the Acentos Review, Atlanta Review, For Women Who Roar magazine, and others. She is a Tin House scholar; and has delivered her poetry at various festivals including Litquake, Lit Crawl, the National Queer Arts Festival, and the Sonido Music Fest. Her first collection of poetry, Unearth [The Flowers], will be published by Red Light Lit Press spring 2020. Find her IG/Twitter/FB: theamatthews_ and www.theamatthews.com from the artist Poetry validates Truth. To see and be seen, feel and be felt, listen and be heard–– poetry honors the body, memory, resiliency of humanity. When I write, I reclaim my voice and feel my own Power. When I write, I see, feel, listen to Spirit. When I write, I join you in love, dialogue, tension. I am no longer alone. I tap into the Source of Strength. As summer winds down, we start to rev up into another academic year. After you stock up on pencils and notebooks, check out our August GLOW! For August, we're featuring poet and writer stewart shaw stewart shaw is a poetry and fiction writer who has attended writing conferences in various African nations. His poems have been published in African American Review, Temenos Literary Journal, Serendipity and others, as well as short stories in Mighty Real: An Anthology of African American Same Gender Loving Writing and African Voices. He is a Cave Canem Poetry Fellow. He has a chapbook titled The House of Men from Glass Lyre Press.
We're so honored that RADAR Productions has been selected alongside 99 other movers and shakers in the current arts and literary landscape in the YBCA 100! Each year, the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts recognizes and celebrates some of the most notable artists and activists today. Recognition as a YBCA 100 honoree is a celebration of an individual’s present efforts and acknowledgment that their work will have future impact. Our YBCA 100 honorees come from the Bay Area and around the world. On this list, celebrities rub elbows with unsung heroes, and activists and artists are as revered as pop stars. It is a list unlike any other. This year's list of honorees includes community favorites such as Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Jr. and well known celebrities Lizzo and Billy Porter. We're proud that the work we do here at RADAR is being spotlighted amongst such esteemed activists and artists.
Please submit all applications to this link.
Radar Productions is currently looking for prospective members for our Development Committee to help raise funds for RADAR’s presenting, commissioning, touring, and artist development programs. The Development Committee takes the lead on all of RADAR's fundraising activity and will produce and host at least two fundraisers per calendar year, while helping cultivate individual donations via our annual ask. ABOUT RADAR Founded in 2003, RADAR Productions is one of the nation’s highest profile literary arts organizations focused on queer and trans people of color (QTPOC). Our presenting, commissioning and touring programs re-imagine what the literary arts can be, stimulate the production of work by QTPOC artists and explore the community-building role played by literature and the arts. Our programs build community and create a platform for innovative, emerging and mid-career queer and trans artists of color whose works challenge mainstream concepts of culture, race, gender, sexuality and class and authentically reflect the experiences of QTPOC. Throughout its 13-year history RADAR has employed the arts to build and amplify a queer community that creates innovative artistic interventions to culture, meaningful transformation for artists’ lives and life-changing and life-affirming access to the literary arts for our audiences. RADAR has always prioritized an inward-facing method: queer artists dialoguing with queer audiences in hopes of strengthening and affirming community, rather than queer artists representing a monolithic queer experience to straight audiences in hopes of being humanized. As such, RADAR prioritizes artistic process/practice, recognizing that the spirit of experimentation, creativity and “art first” has greater potential for cultural change than the expectation that queer artists consistently be expected to be representational first. |