Guidelines



Submission Guidelines: Send 1-3 unpublished poems in the body of an email (NO ATTACHMENTS) to nvneditor[at]gmail.com. No simultaneous submissions. Use "Verse News Submission" as the subject line. Send a brief bio. No payment. Authors retain all rights after 1st-time appearance here. Scroll down the right sidebar for the fine print.
Showing posts with label artwork. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artwork. Show all posts

Saturday, March 29, 2025

WE'RE SITTING AROUND A TABLE NOT FAR FROM THE RUSSIAN BORDER

by Ron Riekki




A Chinese artist, a Russian musician, and American poet,
and we talk about surveillance, sharing how dangerous it is
to be an artist, after speaking with a local who told us about
the tensions with Russia, how they're like a choking fog,
and the musician from Russia says it's all propaganda there,
says she doesn't care, that her voice will never be voiceless,
tells us about being taken in by the Russian police and how
she brutalized them with truth, was let go, and then let go
of her country, emigrating, immigrating, Euro-ricocheting around,
and hanging out with Pussy Riot, doing anti-war campaigns,
and we speak of the ten percent of the Russian population
being tortured, and she speaks of physical torture and
emotional torture and the torture of propaganda, and
the Chinese artist talks about holding up signs in Hong
Kong that were all white, not allowed to have signs with
actual words, so this haunting image, this effective image
of hundreds of artists and writers and protestors and students
holding up these white signs, ghost signs meant to haunt
politicians, and the American poet talks about being hunted
by the Trump administration for a pro-Islamic, pro-immigrant
tweet, how the administration administered paperwork to his
home, pages and pages and pages of warning, how watched
we are everywhere, he says, he thinks, he feels, and we are
near the Russian border, except it's shut down, too dangerous,
and here we are, doing art that is too dangerous, and having
this conversation that is too dangerous, so dangerous that
we turn off our phones to make sure we are not being listened
to, because we want to create the form of our words, rush
home and turn our conversations into lyrics and artwork
and this poem you are reading now, written near a border
that is rotting with worry, a border that lacks moonlight tonight.


Ron Riekki co-edited Undocumented: Great Lakes Poets Laureate on Social Justice.

Tuesday, November 02, 2021

ANGEL

by Alejandro Escudé


Jasper Johns: Mind/Mirror at the Whitney Museum of American Art, Sept 29, 2021–Feb 13, 2022. Above: Jasper Johns, Three Flags, 1958. Encaustic on canvas (three panels), 30 7/8 × 45 3/4 in. (78.4 × 116.2 cm) overall. Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase, with funds from the Gilman Foundation, Inc., The Lauder Foundation, A. Alfred Taubman, Laura-Lee Whittier Woods, Howard Lipman, and Ed Downe in honor of the Museum’s 50th Anniversary 80.32. © 2021 Jasper Johns / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York


In the flag painting the flag
goes and is going into the flag
and it takes us with it
the flag that is into the flag 
beyond what we do when
we surf the net, as a nation
we’re a flag entering another flag
and a flag after that one. 
Jasper Johns knows this, 
or does he? You mustn’t ask
him you know. The interpretation
lags behind the artwork always
like a little girl struggling to keep up
with her father who is walking
too fast for her keep up 
but is she really unable to keep up?
The truth is leaving us, and you,
and taking a train to a new epoch
where a train will travel into
another train and another train
after that toward a sunset
that sets within a sunset and 
(you guessed it) another sunset
after that—because it was
Warhol who engineered the first
internet, an ad box for Brillo
that became box after box
after box. So Johns does too
with his flag and other things,
which is what a country is
…things.


Alejandro Escudé published his first full-length collection of poems My Earthbound Eye in September 2013. He holds a master’s degree in creative writing from UC Davis and teaches high school English. Originally from Argentina, Alejandro lives in Los Angeles with his wife and two children.

Sunday, January 03, 2021

PORTRAIT OF WARPAINT

Pencil on paper with typed spoken word by Deidra Suwanee Dees




Dr. Deidra Suwanee Dees is Director/Tribal Archivist at Poarch Band of Creek Indians. She teaches Native American Studies at the University of South Alabama, initiated by the Tribe. She earned her doctorate at Harvard. She is the author of a chapbook, Vision Lines: Native American Decolonizing Literature. Heleswv heres, mvto.