Tag: raw

  • Slamtidote

    Love vs Autumn (Slamtidote) Cover

    Slamtidote is a newish poetry gig bringing poetry and spoken word to Naarm. It's a collective that puts on a monthly gig, held in secret locations. Once you've booked your ticket (and there are free options) you have a pass to a fabulous night of poetry, art, food and music.

    I read my poem, Notes from Diaspora on Returning 'Home',  to the haunting guitar of Bird Girl. It was the first time I've read my poems accompanied by music. It was an incredible experience with Bird Girl improvising the accompanying melody after hearing a line or two of my poem.

    As well as the performances during the evening, Slamtidote also published a zine for the event, filled with poetry and art from some incredibly talented poets and artists. I was super chuffed to have one one my poems included in the beautiful chapbook.

    The secret venue was gorgeous – festooned with fairy lights and red heart balloons. There was warm food in the Indian Dhaba out the back serving dahl and rice. Plus market stalls with books and art. Something for everyone in fact! Slamtidote is most definitely a great new addition to the poetry scene in Naarm!

     

  • Poetry and Tea

     

    IP - Poetry and Tea 1

    After teaching my eco-dyeing workshop in Niddrie on Sunday, I headed to the Beit e'Shai Teahouse and Pop-Up Gallery in Preston for an evening of tea, tunes and poetry.

    IP - Poetry and Tea 2

    IP - Poetry and Tea 3

    Shiralee Hood was our wonderful MC. Farhad Bandesh sang songs in Kurdish to Yusuke's improvised guitar. All while Nadine served us drinks and snacks and Tara worked in the kitchen to brew more tea. Rasha Tayeh, a Palestinian herbalist and nutritionist, has created a beautiful space in which to meet new friends and drink tea. Everything about the teahouse feels intentional and beautiful.

    IP - Poetry and Tea 6

    There was a green room for the performers where I got to hear the musicians rehearsing and our MC running through her lines.

    A green room! How rockstar is that? Having a place to sit with other performers and prepare was amazing. And Rasha bought us her hibiscus tea and snacks from the Vietnamese restaurant next door that came on real plates. It felt so supportive to have a dedicated space for performers to focus on their work before sharing it with an audience. It's the first time I've ever had a green room – I could get used to it!

    IP - Poetry and Tea 4

    IP - Poetry and Tea 5

    I performed poems about the diaspora experience and the legacy of my mixed race heritage. I wanted to bring all the facets of my being – the food, the language, the culture and the ways in which they inhabit my mind and body.

    I think it was my best performance ever. Rasha created an intimate, safe and welcoming space. And the audience was warm and supportive. I felt at home in the teahouse with this incredible community and my words flowed easily.

    IP - Poetry and Tea 7

    I haven't been writing lot of poetry this year. With all that is happening in the world at the moment, writing poetry feels frivolous and like an indulgence. Here I am safe from harm while other people are starving or are being slaughtered. Genocide is happening in Palestine and our leaders are doing nothing. We petition and protest and we march and still our leaders don't listen.

    So me performing poetry, what's that about? How's that going to help anyone? These are some of the questions I was wrestling with after I accepted Rasha's invitation to perform at the Sunday Sessions. I said yes because I wanted to support her business and her community by giving my time and performing. But still, what good would it do?

    And then I thought, what would I say to someone else if they asked me:  'What is the point of performing/writing poetry if other people are suffering?' And my answer would be 'Your voice is important. What you have to say matters.'

    If we can speak, then we should. About whatever it is that we want to share.

    It's the only way we'll ever be able to understand each other.

     

  • Sunday Teahouse Sessions

    IP - Beit e'Shai Sunday Teahouse Session #1 copy

    Coming up on Sunday 17th November, I will be performing my poetry at the Beit e’Shai Sunday Teahouse sessions.

    Beit e’Shai means House of Tea in Arabic and it is the creation of Palestinian nutritionist, herbalist, artist and independent researcher, Rasha Tayeh. I first met Rasha at a market when I was buying her wonderful tea. 

    I am so delighted to be reading my poetry at the new Beit e’Shai PopUp Teahouse and Gallery in Preston.

    Come along and hear some poetry and tunes and of course drink some tea!

    Book a ticket now!

     

     

  • The Last Dance

    IP - The Last Dance 1

    Last night I attended the last ever Radio Laria poetry evening at Open Studios in Northcote. Open Studios is a fabulous little venue that has been hosting and supporting independent and emerging musicians and artists for the last fifteen years. Sadly they are going to close at the end of the year due to a lack of funding.

     

    We had all the feels with a packed open mic and as usual, great features curated by our hosts, Laura, Emma and Anke.

    Thanks for all the good times, Open Studio! You'll be missed.

     

     

  • Perc.U.Lations

    Perc.u.lations

    Anke Mclean is the fabulous host of a little known poetry open mic held in Dandenong and she recently asked me to come along and be featured poet. I was delighted to accept and spend some time back in the old neighbourhood. I spent my primary school years living in Noble Park North with my parents. Every Friday night Mum would do the weekly grocery shop at safeway in Dandenong while I read a book in Myer. Afterwards we would have dinner at the Light of Asia Indian restaurant which was the closet thing we could get to Sri Lankan cuisine back in the early eighties. I always had gulab jamun for dessert.

     

    Kafé on Hemmings in a delightful cafe and their folded eggs on gluten free toast was divine as was their strawberry matcha latte. I wasn't expecting there to be soma ny tasty things on the menu that I could eat!

     

    But what about the poetry I hear you ask? Well there was poetry. Lots of poetry. The afternoon begins with an hour long writing workshop for anyone wanting to learn more about writing poetry. Then there's an amazing open mic of poets from all over including the Mornington Peninsula and Gippsland. And Anke who is an mc extraordinaire. And the guy whose name I've forgotten but he always ends the afternoon with his guitar and three songs. 

    I got to do two, fifteen minute sets of poetry. I read from my second collection, pas de deux, which is about connections to place, family, motherhood and nature. I also performed some of my more recent work which has started to look at the legacy of my mixed race heritage. These newer poems have also started to play with form and are long and more detailed than my earlier work. I really enjoyed performing at Kafé on Hemming, its a lovely venue and the staff are terrific!

     

  • Perth Poetry Festival Finale

    IP - Finale 1

    IP - Finale 2

    The Perth Poetry Festival Finale was emceed by the fabulous Scott-Patrick Mitchell at the Switch Theatre on Wellington Street in Perth. I think this intimate venue was my favourite performance space for the festival. It was easy to make eye contact with all the members of the audience and tp see their reactions to my poems.

    I was the second performer for the evening and after thanking my lovely husband who was at home all week keeping the home fires burning and looking after our beautiful girls, Gary from WA Poets, who was manning the camera for the Zoom, wished me a happy birthday. At that point the whole audience burst into song! It was a brilliant way to start a performance.

    After the performance, Laksh, Gillain and Ro took me out to dinner at the Moon Cafe in Northbridge where we indulged in mocktails and a vegan ice cream for me for dessert. It was the perfect end to a wonderful birthday and a brilliant festival!

    Thanks Perth and all the lovely people Meet for making my trip memorable in all the right ways!

     

  • Perth Poetry Club

    IP - Perth Poetry Club 2

    When I was exploring Northbridge on my very first day in Perth, I wandered past this funky little diner style cafe with its retro 50s booth seats and promised myself I would come back. I mean with a name like The Moon, how could I resist? At the time I hadn't twigged that this was the venue for Saturday afternoon's Perth Poerty Club at which I would be performing.

    The Perth Poetry Club is hosted by Elio to a packed room at the back of the building. It's on every Saturday afternoon and always has a zoom component so anyone can join. There were so many people that eighteen of them didn't get a chance to perform on the open mic! Poetry is alive and well inn Perth I tell you!

    IP - PPC 1

    For this set I read out a poem from each issue of the Pocketry Almanack that I have published – so far there have been seven issues. If you're an emerging poet who hasn't been published in a journal, had on over to Pocketry. Submissions for issue eight will be opening soon.

    Those beautiful Almanack poems from unheard voices deserve to be taken out from time to time and shared with the rest of the world and I am more than happy to introduce them to new audiences so they can meet people and make new friends. 

     

  • Perth Poetry Festival Gala

    IP - Perth Poetry Festival Gala 1

    IP - Perth Poetry Festival Gala 2

      ~ Scott Patrick Mitchell ~

     

    IP - Perth Poetry Festival Gala 3

    ~ Lisa Collyer  ~

     

    IP - Perth Poetry Festival Gala 4

    ~ Arianne True ~

     

    Last night saw me treading the boards at Planet Royale in Northbridge for the Perth Poetry Festival's opening gala. I shared the stage with an incredible lineup of Local, National and International Guest Poets. Scott-Patrick Mitchell was the host and Glen, the festival's patron gave a witty and thought proving key note address.

    My beautiful family even got to zoom in and join the proceedings. My parents from Ngunnawal Country in the ACT and my husband and daughters from Naarm on Wurrundjeri Country. It's the first feature I've done without them being there and I got a little bit emotional at the start just talking about it.

    In all the rehearsing and preparation for this evening I forgot how much fun it is to get up on stage and perform in front of a live audience, That connection between poet and listener is electric, it's almost alive.

    I met some amazing new people and bought a whole stack of new poetry books, most of which I got signed. All in all, a brilliant night!

     

  • Liminal Spaces, Beyond the Page Workshop

    IP - Liminal Spaces Beyond the Page Workshop

    Has the muse left you and inspiration fled? Do you find it hard to put into words your feelings, thoughts and emotions? Are you stuck in a rut with your writing — revisiting the same metaphors and line breaks again and again? How can you see the world with new eyes so that your writing becomes fresh and imaginative once more? Don’t worry, help is at hand with this two hour workshop that aims to get you out of your rut and thinking in new and different ways.

    The key to writing differently is to learn to think and do things differently. Which isn’t as easy as it sounds as anyone who’s tried to break a habit will know. But it is possible and in this workshop you’ll get out of your head and creep into the cracks by exploring the spaces in between. Bring your child-like self, a sense of adventure and a willingness to play. Through movement, sound and drawing you’ll discover how to write poems that move beyond the page.

    Bring along any art supplies that feel inspiring (coloured pencils, textas, watercolour paints etc) as well as journals, sheets of blank paper etc. It’s an excuse to go wild in the stationery section. If you want to stick with pen and paper that’s fine too but no screens please.

    There will be time during the workshop to share your work with the rest of the group. Sharing is optional and positive feedback is encouraged. This workshop is suitable for poets at any level from emerging to established. Please come at least 5 minutes early so we can start on time.

    Liminal Spaces – Beyond is Page, is part of an incredible line-up of events at this year's Perth Poetry Festival where I'll be appearing as a National Guest Poet alongside Juan Garrido-Slagado from South Australia and Jean Kent from New South Wales as well as International Guest Poet Srijato Bandyopadhyay from India and Local Guest Poets Lisa Collyer, Caitlin Maling, Talya Ruben and Luoyang Chen.

     

    Workshop Details 

    Facilitator: Indrani Perera

    Event: Perth Poetry Festival 2023

    Organiser: WA Poets Inc 

    Time: 9.00 – 11.00am AWST

    Date: Saturday 16th September 2023

    Venue: Centre for Stories. 100 Aberdeen St, Northbridge, WA

    Cost: $25-30

     

    Book your tickets for the workshop here.

    (early bird discount availabe until 1 July 2023)

     

     

     

     

  • Perth Poetry Festival 2023

    Author Photo - Indrani Perera

    I am honoured to announce that I will be a National Guest Poet at this year's Perth Poetry Festival alongside Juan Garrido-Slagado from South Australia and Jean Kent from New South Wales. We'll be joining International Guest Poet Srijato Bandyopadhyay from India as well as Local Guest Poets Lisa Collyer, Caitlin Maling, Talya Ruben and Luoyang Chen. The festival will take place from 9-17 September 2023 on Whadjuk Noongar land in and around the glorious Western Australian city of Boorlo / Perth.

    I've been enviously observing the vibrant Perth Poetry scene from afar for quite some time and I am looking forward to discovering new poets, hearing amazing poetry and being part of it all, even if it's only for a short time. There are so many great poets coming out of Western Australia including Shastra Deo, Madison Godfrey, Scott Patrick Mitchell (who I got to interview in season one of Pocketry Presents), Rashida Murphy, Nadia Rhook and Elfie Shiosaki. And so many workshops I wish I could do, especially those being held at the Wetlands Centre (where Lakshmi R Kanchi is the poet in residence) and at the Centre for Stories.

    It's going to be my second visit to the city. The first was with my parents when I was in primary school and I can barely remember anything from that trip. I'm looking forward to rediscovering this west coast city.

    WA Poets Inc put on a great festival and there will be performances, open mics, workshops and more!

    If this sounds like your cup of tea, you can find the workshops here. There's an early bird discount if you book before 1 July 2023.