Australian
poets Jen Webb, Jeri Kroll, and Paul Hetherington will present their
work on April 6th at the Salt Lake City Public Library at 7:00 P.M. as
part of the City Art Reading Series.
Jen Webb is a
Canberra-based writer who has been publishing, performing, presenting
and exhibiting her work since 1992. Currently the director of the Centre
for Creative and Cultural Research at the University of Canberra where
she is also Distinguished Professor of Creative Practice, she has taught
creative writing for about 10 years, supervises research students in
creative writing and other creative practices, and has worked as a book
editor and arts manager. Prior to becoming an academic, Jen was an
accountant and tax inspector. She is
South African by origin, and has also lived in New Zealand, Canada and
the UK, before settling in Australia. Recent publications include:
Stolen Stories, Borrowed Lines (poetry chapbook, 2015); Watching the
World: Impressions of Canberra (with Paul Hetherington; poems and
photographs; 2015); Researching Creative Writing (scholarly book, 2015).
Jen is completing an Australian Research Council (ARC)-funded
investigation on poetry and creative excellence, and is working on two
other ARC projects, both concerned with creative labour and career
outcomes for creative arts graduates.
Professor Jeri Kroll
established the creative writing program – including the doctorate – at
Flinders University in Adelaide, South Australia. A former President of
the Australasian Association of Writing Programs, she is also an
award-winning poet who has published twenty-five titles for adults and
young people. Criticism includes Creative Writing Studies: Practice,
Research and Pedagogy (Multilingual Matters, 2008) and Research Methods
in Creative Writing (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013). Workshopping the Heart:
New and Selected Poems (Wakefield Press, 2013) and a verse novel,
Vanishing Point (Puncher and Wattman, 2015), are recent books. A
MainStage production of Vanishing Point was held at George Washington
University in October 2014. The play was a winner in the 47th Kennedy
Center American College Theatre Festival and produced in January 2015 in
Ohio. Vanishing Point was short-listed in the 2015 Queensland Literary
Awards.
Paul Hetherington is professor of writing at the
University of Canberra and head of the International Poetry Studies
Institute (IPSI) there. His poetry collection, Six Different Windows won
the 2014 Western Australian Premier’s Book Awards and he was a finalist
in the 2012, 2013 and 2014 international Aesthetica Creative Writing
Competitions. He was shortlisted for the 2013 Montreal International
Poetry Prize and the 2013 Newcastle Poetry Prize. He has has an abiding
interest in the visual arts and edited the final three volumes of the
National Library of Australia’s four-volume edition of the diaries of
the artist Donald Friend. He is one of the founding editors of the
international online journal Axon: Creative Explorations and a founding
editorial committee member of the Meniscus journal. In 2002 he was the
recipient of a Chief Minister’s ACT Creative Arts Fellowship and he was
awarded one of two places on the 2012 Australian Poetry Tour of Ireland.
He was recently awarded an Australia Council for the Arts Residency in
the BR Whiting Studio in Rome.
Most featured readings are
followed by an open reading. City Art is sponsored by the Utah Arts
Council, the Salt Lake City Arts Council, Catalyst, the Salt Lake City
Public Library, Xmission, and the Zoo, Arts, and Park Fund.
The
event is free and open to the public. City Art is sponsored by the
Utah Arts Council, the Salt Lake City Arts Council, Zoo, Arts, and
Parks, X-mission, and audience donations.
Joel Long