On this episode of Awakeners, Lena chats with poets Rick Barot and Brian Teare, who met at Stanford University as young writers and have collaborated for over twenty years.
We discuss Brian’s first fingerprint on Rick’s body of work, the triumphs and failures of mentorship they experienced in institutions of higher ed, their approaches to ekphrasis (i.e. creative work that responds to a work of art, or, to quote poet Tania Clark, that “makes the static sing”), and how they helped one another “re-see” another queer artist’s ethics and aesthetics.
Teare says: “Material culture, print culture, teaching, politics, the actual practice of poetry, the role of visual art in work and in our lives… there are so many overlaps that we never run out of things to talk about.”
Rick Barot's most recent book of poems is Moving the Bones, published by Milkweed Editions in 2024. His previous collection, The Galleons, was longlisted for the National Book Award. His work has appeared in numerous publications, including Poetry, The New Republic, The Adroit Journal, and The New Yorker. He has received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, and Stanford University. He lives in Tacoma, Washington and directs The Rainier Writing Workshop, the low-residency MFA program in creative writing at Pacific Lutheran University.
A 2020 Guggenheim Fellow, Brian Teare is the author of seven critically acclaimed books, including Doomstead Days, winner of the Four Quartets Prize. His most recent publications are a pair of book-length ekphrastic projects exploring queer abstraction, chronic illness, and collage: the 2022 Nightboat reissue of The Empty Form Goes All the Way to Heaven, and the fall 2023 publication of Poem Bitten by a Man, winner of the William Carlos Williams Award. An Associate Professor of Poetry at the University of Virginia, Brian lives in Charlottesville, where he makes books by hand for his micropress, Albion Books.
LINKS:
Introduction to the folio Teare commissioned in response to the PMA Jasper Johns retrospective: https://www.nereview.com/vol-43-no-3-2022/mirroring-practice-poets-respond-to-jasper-johns/
Rick Barot’s poem “Looking at the Romans”: https://www.poemhunter.com/poem/looking-at-the-romans/
Jasper Johns’s cross hatch works: https://harvardartmuseums.org/exhibitions/4350/jasper-johns-in-press-the-crosshatch-works-and-the-logic-of-print
Jasper Johns’s White Flag (1955): https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/487065
Brian Teare’s “White Flag (1955)” from Poem Bitten By a Man: https://poetrysociety.org/poems/white-flag-1955
Adrienne Rich’s poem “Rauschenberg’s Bed”: https://margaret-cooter.blogspot.com/2016/03/poetry-thursday-rauschenbergs-bed-by.html
Martin Mitchell’s review of Rick Barot’s During the Pandemic in Phoebe Journal: https://phoebejournal.com/review-during-the-pandemic/
More Rick Barot: https://www.rickbarot.com/
More Brian Teare: www.brianteare.net and www.albionbooks.net
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