Little Village magazine issue 305: Apr. 2022

Page 52

Market St

Culture A-List

Poetry on the Breeze

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Not all who wander downtown Iowa City are lost, especially during Poetry al Fresco.

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Iowa City Poetry Alfresco, College Hill Neighborhood, Iowa City Saturday, April 30 at 5 p.m. (rain date May 7), Free

Reading locations (additional locations and route TBD)

H River City Housing Collective, 200 S Summit St

A Chauncey Swan Park

D Perez Family Tacos, I 1024 Woodlawn Avenue

630 Iowa Ave B New Pioneer Food Coop, 22 S Van Buren St C Iowa City Catholic

E 613 E College St

J 1034 E College St

F College Green Park

K 1036 Woodlawn Avenue

Worker house, 113 S Johnson St

G 715 E College St

L PorchLight, 1019 E Washington St

COVID. Also: spring! Outside readings felt so right for so many reasons.” The inaugural event was held in May 2021 in Iowa City’s Northside neighborhood. Roberts estimates that, all told, around 400 audience members attended the dozen 20-minute readings. “Some people brought camping chairs and took

“I LOVED THE IDEA FROM THE START BECAUSE IT’S SO TRUE TO OUR MISSION HERE AT IOWA CITY POETRY, OF BRINGING ALL DIFFERENT TYPES OF POETS IN OUR COMMUNITY TOGETHER TO LEARN FROM EACH OTHER AND CELEBRATE TOGETHER.”

52 April 2022 LITTLEVILLAGEMAG.COM/LV305

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to facilitate the kind of programming Duer was proposing. “I loved the idea from the start because it’s so true to our mission here at Iowa City Poetry, of bringing all different types of poets in our community together to learn from each other and celebrate together,” she said in an email. “Also:

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BY GENEVIEVE TRAINOR

s anyone who has attempted it can tell you, organizing poets can be like trying to herd cats. They wander off; they follow their whims; they get distracted by the beauty of that one water droplet on the dented garbage can and the way it contrasts with the empty water bottle balanced aspirationally atop the lid in the hopes that someone will recycle instead of toss it. So it’s no surprise that a couple of the region’s deftest hands at organizing poets are behind an event where wandering and distraction are part of the point. Iowa City Poetry al Fresco was launched in 2021 by poet David Duer, a former English teacher at Washington High School in Cedar Rapids, who for years advised their award-winning Washington Literary Press and produced the PAM Slam showcase. Duer sits on the advisory board of Iowa City Poetry, an organization founded by poet Lisa Roberts, an educator, advocate and performer who is herself uniquely adept at harnessing poetic energy. “In the fall of 2020, Lisa had challenged [the advisory board] to come up with programming ideas,” Duer said in an email. “As was true of all of us, I was missing that sense of artistic community that Iowa City has always been so good at providing. Inspired by two other successful local events—the Mission Creek Lit Crawls and the Longfellow Neighborhood Front Porch Concerts—I proposed a series of short, outdoor, socially distanced readings that would take place in a neighborhood over the course of an evening.” Roberts leapt at the chance for Iowa City Poetry

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them from site to site. Others plopped right down on the grass, sidewalks, curbs or walls. Some hosts put out chairs from their homes, which was incredibly sweet. But most people just lolled and listened,” she said. “Some listeners came for favorite poets or to support specific friends. But a good number of people were in for the entire

evening.” Iowa City Poetry volunteers were assigned at each site, responsible for handing out maps and schedules, implementing safety protocols (including wiping down the mic between poets) and introducing the readers. Portable sound equipment was carried between sites by other volunteers, and there was always an abundance of masks and hand sanitizer available. This year, the logistics will remain the same, but the entire enterprise will shift from the Northside to College Hill. “David argued, and I agreed, that to stay true to the spirit of the event, we won’t want to call on the same hosts and the same readers each year,” Roberts said. “Sites sometimes come with homeowners as readers, so to truly be more inclusive of the whole community, we need to bring Iowa City Poetry al Fresco to new neighborhoods.” Roberts and Duer were drawn to the idea of neighborhoods rather than business districts in part to offer audiences more room to spread out.


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