Friday, December 12, 2014
My chap, igne, from 1993.
igne
20 microherent songs of literature, philosophy and life. 28 pages, 4.25” by 5.5”. Publication Date: 24 August 1993. ISBN 0-926935-88-7. Runaway Spoon Press.
igne nineteen
Surgent
I’m sublimer far
Partitions
3
Con
Questa musica
Et
Cecidere odia pur sang aborts facetiae
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Monday, October 06, 2014
My friend Edgar Allan Poe at The Grolier Club in New York City.
Woodcut portrait of Poe by Antonio Frasconi. From the collection of Susan Jaffe Tane. The Grolier Club.
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Woodcut portrait of Poe by Antonio Frasconi. From the collection of Susan Jaffe Tane. The Grolier Club.
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Wednesday, October 01, 2014
E·ratio is reading for issue 20, the January 2015 issue. The deadline for submissions is November 30th. Please see the Contact Page for guidelines and where to send.
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Tuesday, September 30, 2014
Ourtt Geunk — Joseph F. Keppler at Zeitgeist
Joseph F. Keppler's show at Zeitgeist WILL CONTINUE DURING OCTOBER!
There will a celebration reception this Thursday evening October 2nd from 6 to 8 pm!
“Unicyclist” 2013 (43”h, 13”w, 5”d) steel, rubber.
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Joseph F. Keppler's show at Zeitgeist WILL CONTINUE DURING OCTOBER!
There will a celebration reception this Thursday evening October 2nd from 6 to 8 pm!
“Unicyclist” 2013 (43”h, 13”w, 5”d) steel, rubber.
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Wednesday, August 27, 2014
Ourtt Geunk
Joseph F. Keppler at Zeitgeist September 2014
Joseph F. Keppler is having a show of his sculpture at Zeitgeist (171 S. Jackson Street) in Seattle. The show is called Ourtt Geunk and is for the month of September.
Opening reception Friday, September 5, 6-8 pm.
Joseph F. Keppler is a steel sculptor and arts writer who lives in West Seattle. His home and garden are an art gallery-in-process. His welding studio is in Ballard. He believes philosophy and critical thinking are crucial for contemporary artists developing our future art history. His work recognizes visual and verbal arts’ importance as culture and that culture is what is least understood and most devitalized by power and its distributive bureaucracies. The artist’s patient mind is what lasts in art.
Contributing editor Joseph F. Keppler (center, smiling).
“Black Crucifixion” 2014 (21”h, 17”w, 4.25”d) painted steel, string. Collection St. Thomasino.
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Joseph F. Keppler at Zeitgeist September 2014
Joseph F. Keppler is having a show of his sculpture at Zeitgeist (171 S. Jackson Street) in Seattle. The show is called Ourtt Geunk and is for the month of September.
Opening reception Friday, September 5, 6-8 pm.
Joseph F. Keppler is a steel sculptor and arts writer who lives in West Seattle. His home and garden are an art gallery-in-process. His welding studio is in Ballard. He believes philosophy and critical thinking are crucial for contemporary artists developing our future art history. His work recognizes visual and verbal arts’ importance as culture and that culture is what is least understood and most devitalized by power and its distributive bureaucracies. The artist’s patient mind is what lasts in art.
Contributing editor Joseph F. Keppler (center, smiling).
“Black Crucifixion” 2014 (21”h, 17”w, 4.25”d) painted steel, string. Collection St. Thomasino.
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Wednesday, July 23, 2014
The Apryl Miller Interview at E·ratio has been viewed five-hundred times!
Thank you, Apryl Miller!
“The majority of my expressions revolve around working through emotional states or situations. My themes are silence, tears, family relationships, difficult loves and how we treat each other as people. All of this is placed under the umbrella of how we are universally imperfect. Other artists may focus on the environment, etc., but mine is all about feelings and relationships.”
“My titles can be very much like stories, like any sort of writing, but I love to do it and especially love it when the title arrives of its own volition. ‘Sculpture Masquerading as Furniture’ arrived in that way. Initially I was trying to market them as furniture pieces, but after a time I realized they transcend furniture.”
“I have messages to share, messages of hope, of redemption, of survival, of love and acceptance of ourselves and each other. My prayers are still sometimes obscure, but I believe there is a God who hears us.”
AprylMiller.com
Apryl Miller at Saatchi Art
Update: For the month of July, The Apryl Miller Interview at E·ratio was viewed five-hundred and ninety-four times!
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Saturday, June 21, 2014
a noun sing e·ratio 19
with new work by Jacqueline Winter Thomas, Valerie Witte, Leanne Bridgewater, Jennie Cole, Jessica B. Weisenfels, Laura Carter, Carey Scott Wilkerson, Marcia Arrieta, Ezra Mark, David Rushmer, Yakman K. Tsering, Lauren Marie Cappello, Jessica Comola, Bill Dunlap, Gabrielle M. Belfiglio, Dan Raphael, Simon Perchik, Philip Hammial, Iain Britton, Travis Cebula, Ric Carfagna, Raymond Farr, Mark Young, Joel Chace, Aditya Bahl, Jukka-Pekka Kervinen, and The Margo Korableva Performance Theatre
featuring
The Apryl Miller Interview
e·ratio editions e·chaps by Eileen R. Tabios and David Berridge
and
Sampling Text Threads Tied Together in Seattle
essay and art by Joseph F. Keppler
edited by Gregry Vincent St. Thomasino
with contributing editor Joseph F. Keppler
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Wednesday, June 18, 2014
The Apryl Miller Interview
“The majority of my expressions revolve around working through emotional states or situations. My themes are silence, tears, family relationships, difficult loves and how we treat each other as people. All of this is placed under the umbrella of how we are universally imperfect. Other artists may focus on the environment, etc., but mine is all about feelings and relationships.”
“Once, while being interviewed for a Swedish art magazine, I was asked about stories involving Alan Ginsberg, Timothy Leary, and Andy Warhol. The journalist could not recall her source, and I, not wishing my art to be about them, but about me, told her that there are such things as urban legends.”
“My titles can be very much like stories, like any sort of writing, but I love to do it and especially love it when the title arrives of its own volition. ‘Sculpture Masquerading as Furniture’ arrived in that way. Initially I was trying to market them as furniture pieces, but after a time I realized they transcend furniture.”
“I have messages to share, messages of hope, of redemption, of survival, of love and acceptance of ourselves and each other. My prayers are still sometimes obscure, but I believe there is a God who hears us.”
AprylMiller.com
Apryl Miller at Saatchi Art
Forthcoming in E·ratio 19
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Saturday, May 10, 2014
Tuesday, May 06, 2014
E·ratio is reading for issue 19, the summer 2014 issue. The deadline for submissions is June 13th. E·ratio appears for winter and for summer. See the Contact page for guidelines.
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Thursday, April 17, 2014
Forthcoming in E·ratio 19
Asemic Knitting Writing
Margo Korableva Performance Theatre, Tbilisi, Georgia
Gvantsa Nikabadze, Keti Latsunashvili, Maiko Lapachi, Mary Vardiashvili and Mariam Nikabadze
Conceived and directed by David Chikhladze
Photo assistance: Ana Kalandarishvili
Design assistance: Smaki Siradze
Thanks to Rusiko Oat and OAT Gallery, Tbilisi, Georgia
Asemic Knitting Writing
Margo Korableva Performance Theatre, Tbilisi, Georgia
Gvantsa Nikabadze, Keti Latsunashvili, Maiko Lapachi, Mary Vardiashvili and Mariam Nikabadze
Conceived and directed by David Chikhladze
Photo assistance: Ana Kalandarishvili
Design assistance: Smaki Siradze
Thanks to Rusiko Oat and OAT Gallery, Tbilisi, Georgia
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Thursday, April 10, 2014
“Suppose that I could succeed in writing as well as Shakespeare. It would be lovely, but what then? There is something wanting in literary art even at its highest. Literature is not enough. The greatest literature is still only mere literature if it has not a purpose commensurate with its art. Presence or absence of purpose distinguishes literature from mere literature, and the elevation of the purpose distinguishes literature within literature. That is merely literature that has no other object than to please. Minor literature has a didactic object. But the greatest literature of all—the literature that scarcely exists—has not merely an aesthetic object, nor merely a didactic object, but, in addition, a creative object: that of subjecting its readers to a real and at the same time illuminating experience. Major literature, in short, is an initiation into truth.”
—Katherine Mansfield
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—Katherine Mansfield
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Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Monday, February 10, 2014
On Twitter it’s The Best of E·ratio and right now it’s poet Anne Blonstein (1958-2011):
https://twitter.com/EratioPoetry.
E·ratio is reading for issue 19, the spring 2014 issue.
E·ratio publishes poetry in the postmodern idioms with an emphasis on the intransitive. E·ratio has been online for ten years and has consistently presented new, first-time and emerging writers alongside some of the most recognized and respected writers of our time. E·ratio will never ask for a donation. Please support us with a “Like” on Facebook or Follow us on Twitter.
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https://twitter.com/EratioPoetry.
E·ratio is reading for issue 19, the spring 2014 issue.
E·ratio publishes poetry in the postmodern idioms with an emphasis on the intransitive. E·ratio has been online for ten years and has consistently presented new, first-time and emerging writers alongside some of the most recognized and respected writers of our time. E·ratio will never ask for a donation. Please support us with a “Like” on Facebook or Follow us on Twitter.
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Friday, January 10, 2014
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