Thinking with Nature, Creative Writing and Poetry | Wednesday 28 February - Wednesday 20 March 2024, 7.00pm - 8.30pm
Thinking with Nature, Creative Writing and Poetry | Wednesday 28 February - Wednesday 20 March 2024, 7.00pm - 8.30pm
Four One and Half Hour Weekly Online Sessions
I offer online spaces to allow a wider accessibility. All sessions are recorded and shared only with members who join. This means you can catch up at your leisure or revisit any conversations, discussions or ideas again and again. Please add your email address when booking, all the joining information will be send out the day before.
Let’s pause, listen to words, move and write together.
These workshops aim to offer tools to support and inspire your own creative writing and poetry practice. During the workshops, I welcome you to collectively explore ways of conversing between our individual and collective bodies and that of the textual and filmic bodies
The workshop spaces seek to move through non-hierarchical conversations and to the unexpected sociability of the unknown encounters ahead of us, to pose a speculative space to think with the temporalities of creative writing and poetry practice. To offer a meditative space to explore together.
Inspired by Dublin Art Book Fair, Ireland’s leading art book fair and Wendy Erskine's theme Polyphonic:
‘Erskine writes, "multiple voices; multiple narratives; multiple perspectives: the polyphonic. Whether it’s simultaneous or sequenced, whether it’s in visual art, text or sound, let’s celebrate polyphony in all its complexity and contrariness. Let’s explore this non-hierarchical, democratic mode which allows for plurality of expression and response. The polyphonic, a challenge to the controlling, totalising ‘I'."‘
Nature will tangle and entwine throughout the four-week sessions in varying ways, as it speaks to Poetry, Creative Writing and Art. Yet, Poetry, Creative Writing and Art will also be explored beyond these modes, to converse together with literary devices such as ekphrasis, in which a visual work of art is described in detail, how to structure narrative, holding readers, writing backwards, writing with joy whilst learning from Irish and Indigenous poetry and creative writing. This course entwines art and nature to experience the wonders of wildlife and green spaces all around us in a more mindful way, this includes our gardens, city parks, woods, nature reserves and beyond.
The course will encompass LGBTQIA+ topics whilst decolonising, thinking with the power and joy of creativity and nature collectively. All sessions will be full of inspiration from artists, poets and writers, as well as practical activities to try within and beyond, which includes online resources crafted especially for members of the course. The course is aimed at all those seeking to be more mindful in their everyday and looking for tools to release their own creativity. Each week, there is space for members to share thoughts and their own creativity and ask questions.
Week 1: Creative Writing thinking with nature
Introductions and hopes and desires for this course
Entering with joy - how to write with joy – practical activities
Thinking and writing from the ground - Memory and soil
How to plant and write together - Vietnamese Immigration Garden at Documenta Fifteen 2022
Exploring the beauty of abandoned places – how can we connect and write with architecture and histories of these spaces?
Thinking kinship with Octavia E.Butler
How to navigate writing personal histories, looking to Saidiya Hartman for inspiration – ‘Wayward Lives, Intimate Histories of Riotous Black Girls, Troublesome Women and Queer Radicals’
How to write backwards - how to reorientate ourselves
Working with writing prompts to write within the session and to take beyond
End with a poem
Week 2: Creative Writing
How to structure narrative and holding readers
Delving into Point of View
Thinking with the work of Janet Malcolm, who has delved into biographical convention – starting with photos given, then using personal photographs as writing prompts (members to bring a photo to the session).
Writing activity around a radio voice
Exploring autopoesis, Denise Ferreira da Silva and ‘writing the self into being’
Trying ekphrasis together, in which a visual work of art is described in detail
Exploring the stories of Irish writer Claire Keegan and upcoming film
Thinking with Irish artist Jesse Jones, how do we feel inspired by her work?
Space for members to share responses from activities from within and beyond the sessions
Introduction to activities to try after the session
End with a poem
Week 3: Poetry
Types of poetry – exploring poets that have explored nature as a tool for deeper stories/meaning
Irish Poetry – Annemarie Ni Churreain, exploring the ‘…perspective of living in subliminal tension and surrounded by natural beauty.’ (Description of Bloodroot)
How to enter poetry, and write our own
Writing prompts to write poetry
How to enter poetry by Keats - To Autumn, 1819– how to write alongside the seasons with a kaleidoscopic of images
Nature and Haikus – lets write our own together
Pathways with Indigenous poetry
Space for members to share responses from activities from within and beyond the sessions
Introduction to activities to try after the session
End with a poem
Week 4: Poetry and Creative Writing
Thinking with flows of water – exploring ocean as archive and flowing writing, looking at the work of Phoebe Boswell, 2022 writer in residence at Whitechapel Gallery
Embodied writing – activities within the session
Tips from Margaret Atwood, what can we learn from her technique of looking in spaces in the home
Marie Theresa to share her own writing, to initiate and explore freewriting together
Wake Work, with Christina Sharpe, how to deploy literacy terms as a methodology for resistance, attention and imagining
·Trying ekphrasis together, in which a visual work of art is described in detail
How to start a creative journal
Space for members to share responses from activities from within and beyond the sessions
Introduction to activities to try and take beyond the course
End with a poem
Image from Marie Theresa’s film practice