Showing posts with label Jamie Townsend. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jamie Townsend. Show all posts

Friday, July 2, 2021

Jamie Townsend : on WORM HOLES

 

 

 

Worm Holes developed out of several years of thinking about the idea of the apocalypse through a series of urban spaces I've lived in over the last decade. The chap is a serial poem, which oscillates through ekphrastic engagements as well as my own autobiography of urban drift, through a series of lenses: gentrification, economic collapse, queerness, homogenization of culture. It was written, in part, in dialogue with artist Cao Fei's multimedia exhibition La Town,

From the chap:

Five years ago I stumbled into Cao Fei’s La Town installation while wandering PS1, MOMA's satellite location in Queens. The exhibit seemed to glow in the too bright light of day after a seamless nocturnal slip into extinction, reemerging into a city that spat me out just a few months previous. Cao’s nightmare models scattered around the gallery—crumbling cityscapes, pastoral wastes, vast yet claustrophobic galleries, airline hangers packed with featureless crowds and escaped zoo animals—equal parts Through the Looking Glass and Escape from New York. Dozens of display cases featuring tiny railway figurines, distressed by hand, fluxes of hardened gel obscuring flames or plasticine waterlines rising to envelope train platforms—a wormhole metropolis, a city on fire, a night museum, a biblical deluge.

Having lived in at least a dozen apartments over the last decade, guided in part by economic and emotional ground zero, death, illness, depersonalization and creeping debt, Cao’s looped film with it’s Hiroshima Mon Amor narration panning over motionless, apocalyptic stagesets matched a pervasive, libidinal fear I had carried with me out of a strict evangelic childhood. A non-linear continuum blossomed in my mind like the germ of Satanic panic, globally gone to seed. Or a sudden point of connection—reading Dhalgren on a fainting couch in another city, another relationship I escaped from almost too late. No rapture at the end of my portrait of an artist but something new, inscrutable, dangerous, liberating.

 

 

 

Jamie Townsend is a genderqueer/transfemme poet and editor living in Oakland, CA. They are the author of 6 chapbooks as well as 2 longer collections Shade (Elis Press) and Sex Machines (speCt!). They are also the editor of Beautiful Aliens: A Steve Abbott Reader (Nightboat) and Libertines in the Ante-Room of Love: Poets on Punk (Jet Tone). With Nick DeBoer they curate Elderly.

 

Tuesday, November 3, 2020

Jamie Townsend : Two poems

 


TRYING TO BE AN OCCASION IN A STORM
(After kari edwards)


My sex was barren as a cave the world cannot find its way inside

I sleep on the ground and imagine things more real than dirt

I was an event most were mostly interested in

You can’t really escape the church yet

To survive means goodbye ‘healthy relationships’

Hello besties listening to the dark center of the universe


In the dark, under the covers I might

Disintegrate into the thin air, if you like

We read Genesis, a list poem, head on a lazy susan

Swerving like an atom in descent

Slip your hands beneath my dress

Soft as a feather stiff as a board

Object speaks on special occasion

A quality impossible to translate

Hell in a knockoff handbag

A prime example

Dangerous as a triangle

We keep our eyes on the angel

The reversing horizon

Bubbles piling on a thin skin of milk

Obviously courting a sense of breezy repentance

The threat you might be a fairy

And me lost in Fairyland

That I could trace the map of your torso at will


Birth a spiritualism of bacteria


Our blood’s hot air meeting a cold front


Holiday in the high prairie, gateless and barren as sex


The snow is sideways and you’re going super fast

 

 

MASH NOTE


‘Bless you’ I write to myself

From the inside out

Notes swarm through the air


Now I want to be your dog

A frozen thought, a rainbow


Orbiting the sun


She’s so high


She stretches into an I

Tiresias in the sky


Where diamonds aren’t

A girl’s best friend

 


 

Jamie Townsend is a genderqueer poet and editor living in Oakland. They are the author of 6 chapbooks as well as the long-form collections Shade (Elis Press, 2015) and Sex Machines (speCt!, 2020). They are also the editor of Beautiful Aliens: A Steve Abbott Reader (Nightboat, 2019) and Libertines in the Ante-Room of Love: Poets on Punk (Jet Tone, 2019). With Nick DeBoer they curate Elderly.

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