Art: Making a Rothko from a Wall and a Light by James Metelak
LOOKING FOR MY KILLER BY THYLIAS MOSS
Music composed and performed by Ansted Moss, musician from Ann Arbor. Vocals by Thylias Moss.
About the author:
Thylias Moss, a self-employed multi-racial “maker” Thylias Moss Writing LLC, is also Professor Emerita in the Departments of English and Art & Design at the University of Michigan.
Author of 13 published books, and recipient of numerous awards and honors, among them a MacArthur Fellowship, and a Guggenheim Fellowship, and many other awards, including several Pushcart Prizes, and multiple appearances in the “Best American Poetry” series and is even included in in the “Best of the Best American Poetry” series, all of this part of her approach to making stuff known as Limited Fork Theory an approach to making and thinking developed in order to assist co-makers and co-learners to become more collaborative in thinking and being. All about how things interact across all boundaries, and encouragement of interaction that becomes more meaningful over time; all have collaborators. Nothing makes alone, and everything makes; there is nothing that exists that does not make stuff in some form, which is also open: any form that becomes possible; invent whenever necessary. “Making” is not static, is evidence of life.
She has completed with her primary collaborator, himself a poet, spoken word artist Mr. Bob Holman, with whom she is in a meld, as he said to her, “The Fire will meld us together”, and this poem “Crepe Paper, Golden Coach Tether system” contains that precious word “meld” that defines their Love connection, and is actually a poem from an as yet unfinished collection of poems about his hat, a Golden Coach, as it says on the silken lining. She often wears his hat. She is working on a number of collaborations after her next collection of poetry Shawsheen Memorial Broom Society.
http://www.4orkology.com
http://www.midhudsontaffy.com
http://www.moxiesupper.com
http://www.lex97.com
http://www.thyliasmoss-writer.com
Art: Making a Rothko from a Wall and a Light by James Metelak, an Oklahoma photographer in Kyrgystan