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Castro, a young poet whose debut collection Cantos to Blood & Honey (Coffee House Press, $12.95) has garnered impressive critical acclaim, also writes with a rhythmic Caribbean pulse. Drawing from Spanish, English and Yoruba languages, drumming rhythms and a colorful palette of historic and ultra-contemporary imagery, his original poetry layers diverging histories, mythologies and aesthetics from Africa, the Caribbean and North America in an attempt to synthesize the complex cultural experiences of our great American "melting pot"--the latter being a perhaps too-callous metaphor for what amounts to the majority of transplanted peoples living in our country today.
For $15, local writers can join Cruz and Castro in a workshop from 12:30 to 3 p.m. Saturday in the José Galvez Gallery, 743 N. Fourth Ave. Both programs are sponsored by the UA Extended University Writing Works Center and the UA Poetry Center. For registration and other information, call 626-4444.
Another breath of fresh air on the evening's program is a narration of Copland's "Lincoln's Portrait" by the newly seated UA president, Peter Likins. Since he replaced the virtually invisible former-President Manuel Pacheco on October 1, President Likins has demonstrated an openness and accessibility long absent from the UA's executive leadership. His thoughtful response to a critical student letter in a recent issue of the Daily Wildcat and this collaboration with a UA arts event are a welcome change of pace, and we hope, harbingers of an energetic new administration. Concert is at 8 p.m. Monday, November 10, in UA Crowder Hall, south end of the pedestrian underpass on Speedway east of Park Avenue. Tickets range from $3 to $6, available at the UA Fine Arts box office or by calling 621-1162. Festival passes range from $5 to $15, and include a lecture by prize-winning author and composer Jan Swafford, dinner, and a contemporary pre-concert performance conducted by Daniel Asia. Call 621-8517 for information.
VOICE OF HOPI: Join independent producer and director Victor
Masayesva for a visual presentation and discussion of his
work at 7 p.m. Friday, November 7, at Etherton Gallery,
135 S. Sixth Ave. Masayesva, widely recognized for his experimental
video and filmmaking dealing with Native American communities,
was raised in the conservative Hopi village of Hotevilla, during
a time when contact with Anglo people and culture was limited
to interactions with government school teachers. His film Imagining
Indians was the first feature-length film produced and
directed by a Native American, and it's screened in festivals
on all five continents. He is also a printmaker and photographer.
Call 620-1626 for more information on the gallery talk.
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