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Multimodal Poetics

  • UBC Robson Square 800 Robson Street Vancouver, BC, V5S 0G4 Canada (map)

This unique workshop will feature the work of three distinct digital artists: Kedrick James, Jim Andrews, and Natasha Boskic. They will share their experimentation with poetry and technology, from creating a permanent digital record of multimodal poetics to layers of verses that are fragmented or disappearing. Andrews’ Sea of Po, a poetry mag-app, will allow the participants to play with the app and experience poetry in visual form as a computer art. James’ app PhoneMe invites poets and word-lovers across the globe to be part of a social network for place-based spoken poetry. Boskic offers an opportunity for literary expression where analog and digital technologies are mixed.

Location: Room C215, UBC Robson Square

Type: Workshop

Facilitators: Jim Andrews, Sea of Po (app) | Kedrick James, PhoneMe (app) | Natasha Boskic, Still/ed /Here (transmedia installation)

About The Facilitators

Kedrick James is a language naturalist, exploring the wilds of discourse and befriending all the strange creatures he finds there. He explores improvisation and extends his poetics to music and other media. He is the founder of PhoneMe, a free mobile app for place-based spoken poetry and believes in poetry as something of, for, and by the people. He has published his work in books, magazines, journals and on vinyl records, cassettes, CDs and online. He is best known as a spoken word performer, and in this capacity has toured internationally, been featured on TV, radio, podcasts and theatrical productions. He currently works as a professor in the the Department of Language and Literacy Education at the University of British Columbia, and is writing on a new book about poetry in the age of language-generating Artificial Intelligence. He spends his spare time on his ranch in the Boundary Country of southern British Columbia

Natasha Boškić works at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. She moved to Canada with her two children from war-torn Serbia in 1999, during a NATO aerial bombing campaign. A long history of storytelling, folk tales and legends, and her personal life experience have shaped Natasha’s writing. She writes poetry and short personal narratives. Interested in technology as a new landscape for literary expression, she experiments with new media. She is fascinated by the opportunities to combine analog and digital technologies, and uses a variety of media to write narratives. She likes bringing poetry into every day in fun and engaging way. Her collaborative transmedial installation, “Still/ed here,” has been exhibited in Canada, Portugal, Serbia, Denmark, England and Ireland, and was awarded the 1st prize in the category of Digital and performative multimedia art in Surrey Art Gallery in 2019. The video poem, “On the Margin of History”, part of the installation, was also screened at various film festivals. Her project “Taste of Love” was a collection of edible flowers made of wafer paper with poetry lines printed on the petals. Each unique flower was available during Hot Chocolate Festival in Vancouver in 2020 for Valentine’s Day. Natasha’s Smart Cookie project was presented at TEC Expo event at UBC, where lemon tarts were overlayed with audio poetry, accessible via mobile app. Natasha’s work have been published in a number of literary journals and magazines in Canada, Europe and US. (ditch, Quills, Allegro Poetry, Visual Verse, The Post Feminist Post: Modern Romance), anthologies (Timeless Voices, Alive at the Centre: An Anthology of Poems from the Pacific NorthWest) and special publications. Natasha’s latest short poetry film, “Legacy”, was exhibited at the Polygon Gallery in North Vancouver in 2022 and screened at film festivals in 2023. She obtained a Ph.D. at UBC, with a focus on ethics and narratives in gameworlds. More about her work at onlywords.ca

Jim Andrews has been publishing vispo.com since 1996. It is the centre of his work as poet-programmer, media poet, and essayist on language, art and technology.

Earlier Event: September 16
Invisible No More: Filipino Words