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Likestarlings is a place for talking in poems and pictures. We pair poets with poets and photographers with photographers. Each pair produces a sequence of new works responding in turn to one another. Our palaver blog goes beyond poetry and photography to discuss collaboration in theory and in practice in a wide range of places. Please take a look, and feel free to add comments, opinions and suggestions here. Read poems here, look at photographs here.
July 30th, 2009

A slight tangent to my last post: I saw the ICA exhibition Poor. Old. Tired. Horse. last week which reintroduced me to the Concrete Poetry movement in which its practitioners used the visual manifestation of the words to equal effect as the conventional elements of the poem. [Editor Dave also points out to me the correct term for shaped poems is technopaegnia with the most famous example here]. Some of the works such as Sea Poppy 1 by Ian Hamilton Finlay have been painted directly on to the gallery wall.

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© Ian Hamilton Finlay

Whilst there are obvious connections to be made in the way in which images have historically (both conventionally and radically) been layed out on pages, my thoughts turned towards the way in which a sequence of images is hung on the wall, in particular Paul Graham’s installation at the Deutsche Boerse Prize at the Photographers Gallery this year. Graham’s works in the show, an excerpt from his 12 book series a shimmer of possibility (2007), rise and fall on the gallery wall in a collection of fleeting verses which force you to move in an out from the wall, and even stoop to see some of the lowest pictures. Images seemingly repeated – but actually incrementally different – also have considerable effect in the reading of the whole work. Graham specifically cites a literary reference for a shimmer of possibilty,  Chekov’s short stories, and though not specifically poetry it’s still a good case point in which to consider the other devices at play when presenting both photographs and poems.

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© Paul Graham


January 27th, 2009

After several months of talking, emailing, writing and walks in the park, Likestarlings goes live with a chain between David Hart and David Hawkins. Several other chains are in progress and will be posted over the coming weeks.

The Likestarlings idea occurred to us (Caleb Klaces and David Hawkins) last summer, thinking that it would be great to meet and correspond with other poets on something practical. We’d shared emails about writing poems, and shared poems, but we’d never tried sharing a poetry chain.

Poems have long been written round-robin. There is a strong tradition of Japanese communal poetry with the strict forms and processes, Renku and Renga. More recently in the West, those names have been used to apply more generally to poems in which several people have had a hand.

The worry with such experiments is that they can be more interesting for the writers than the readers. In Likestarlings, poets can respond to their partner’s poems however they like, as long as it doesn’t need too much scrolling down the screen, and they write relatively quickly. Over five poems, narratives, shared ticks, image sequences and voices can take shape, but there is little time for indulgence or for it to grow stale. The connection is very personal, while also being necessarily critical.

We hope that here the pleasure for writers and readers is shared.

January 24th, 2009

In his house on stilts high among beaks
And palavers of birds
This sandgrain day in the bent bay’s grave
He celebrates and spurns

Dylan Thomas, Poem on his birthday

Read posts, celebrate and spurn here…