Why is the Great American Poem So Hard to Write?
Featured, Art & Justice Dean Ellis Featured, Art & Justice Dean Ellis

Why is the Great American Poem So Hard to Write?

Living as we do in trying times, Dean has been pondering poetry’s purposes, as Far Flung, his new poetry collection from Portal’s Press can attest. Throughout the volume he asks and answers the question, what can poetry do for a world that appears to be bleeding out anywhere you look? “This country is collapsing from within, it seems,” he says. “Poetry may be the lie that tells the truth, but what difference does it make?” When I ask him what difference it’s made for him, he dreamily returns to his lifetime of adventures. “A friend of mine in Brazil—he has something like a Brazilian Rick’s Cafe—set up a table where people would come up and I’d write them poetry on the spot,” he says.

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My Hotel Room
Featured, Art & Justice Joshua Smith Featured, Art & Justice Joshua Smith

My Hotel Room

As the right hand man of celebrity photographer Greg Gorman, Josh Smith has often traveled to far-flung destinations to coordinate and teach high-end photography workshops. Spending countless nights in the unfamiliar ambiances of hotel rooms, Josh had the idea to document the traces of his humanity in these transient spaces.

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Review: Called to Spirit, Women & Healing Arts in New Orleans
Featured, Art & Justice Tyler Rosebush Featured, Art & Justice Tyler Rosebush

Review: Called to Spirit, Women & Healing Arts in New Orleans

If you follow the sound of steady drumbeats and lilting accordion into the Ogden’s third floor gallery, prepare to be dazzled by the Neighborhood Story Project’s exhibit Called to Spirit: Women & Healing Arts in New Orleans. Presented as part of Prospect.5, and on display through January 23rd, curators Rachel Breunlin and Bruce “Sunpie” Barnes have retraced the legacies of our city’s most notable female spiritual leaders—past and present—through their sacred objects, audio recordings, visual art, and archival material. By presenting the unique material culture of New Orleans’ particular form of African-diasporic spiritualism, the exhibit broadens definitions of art into the metaphysical.

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Com(Monu)ments
Featured, Art & Justice Brad Richard Featured, Art & Justice Brad Richard

Com(Monu)ments

Queer poet and legendary Lusher English teacher Brad Richard is a Gulf Coast native, born in Port Arthur and full-fledged New Orleanian since the sixth grade. "I knew I was a writer from a young age," says Richard, "but I went through some other possibilities—like little children who don't that they're queer do. I was going to either be a priest or a jeweler." In junior high, Richard began writing poetry, making a small chapbook with the precocious title Living and Dying, Trying and Failing. "I knew I was a poet pretty exclusively by the end of high school," he says.

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Art for Sale
Articles, Art & Justice Stephanie Pearl Travers Articles, Art & Justice Stephanie Pearl Travers

Art for Sale

Making a living as an artist is hard work. While it remains a dream for many, the pressures of a rapidly increasing cost of living here in New Orleans is turning that dream into a difficult hustle.

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Bail on the Ballot
Articles, Art & Justice Holly Devon Articles, Art & Justice Holly Devon

Bail on the Ballot

The clash between the old guard and its challengers is especially intense in the magistrate judge’s race, which has seen Flip the Bench candidate Steve Singer go head to head over bail with the more traditional former ATC commissioner Juana Lombard.

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High Art at the McKenna Museum
Art & Justice Alexander Jusdanis Art & Justice Alexander Jusdanis

High Art at the McKenna Museum

The McKenna Museum, by collecting the works of African-American artists throughout history under one roof, demonstrates that they form a distinct and ongoing lineage—a singular canon of black art driven by diverse experiences and visions.

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Defending the Collective: An Interview with Malik Rahim

Defending the Collective: An Interview with Malik Rahim

From his days organizing with the Black Panther Party in the Desire Projects, to co-founding the Common Ground Collective, Malik’s brilliance as a community organizer lies in the simplicity of his model: gather any and all available resources, do the necessary work no matter how unglamorous it may be, and honor and protect one another like your life depends on it.

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Artist In Exile: Michael Meads

Artist In Exile: Michael Meads

He meticulously chronicled the New Orleans underworld for decades before Katrina hit and destroyed much of his studio and countless works of original art. Though he has relocated to higher ground in New Mexico for the time being, he remains a devoted reveler and supernumerary in the mad opera of New Orleans.

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