Lee Chilcote
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Cleveland Public Poetry: Writing About Place

8/23/2019

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On Saturday, Sept. 21st from 12-1 pm, I'll be at Cleveland Public Library's main branch to explore and discuss place-based writing with local writer Damien Ware. We will read from our works and share our experiences living in and writing about Cleveland. Copies of my books How to Live in Ruins and The Shape of Home will be for sale along with Damien's recent works.
 
Click here for more info.

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One World Day keeps growing in Cleveland Cultural Gardens

8/23/2019

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On Sunday, Aug. 25, the Cleveland Cultural Gardens will celebrate the 74th annual One World Day, a festival highlighting the 32 different cultures worldwide that are represented in the gardens as well as the 100-plus nationalities residing in Northeast Ohio. 

The event will be a milestone for the cultural gardens, a completely unique entity that only exists in Cleveland, says Lori Ashyk, executive director of the Cleveland Cultural Gardens Federation. “I think it’s going to be bigger and better than ever and will help further our mission of peace through mutual understanding,” she says.

Read the full story in FreshWater Cleveland here.

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Is Lorain Avenue the new heart of Ohio City? These urban entrepreneurs seem to think so

8/15/2019

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"A decade after Ohio City leaders began trying to capitalize on the success of West 25th St. by luring new businesses to Lorain Avenue, local entrepreneurs are moving to this funky west side main street to take advantage of affordable rents and a newly emerging restaurant, retail, and nightlife scene."

Read the full story in FreshWater Cleveland here.
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Cleveland Needs More than Painted Bike Lanes to create Safe Streets for Pedestrians and Cyclists. Is Vision Zero the Answer?

5/13/2019

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Read the full story in Cleveland Scene here. Cleveland.com covered protected bike lanes a few weeks later in this story.

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Gigging it with O'Leary / Bruce / Plank at Happy Dog

4/3/2019

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Come have a drink with us at the Happy Dog on Friday, April 19th! I will be debuting a collection of original songs with collaborators Jen O'Leary (voice), Daniel Bruce (guitar) and Aidan Plank (bass). $10 at the door (money goes to the band). Speaking of that ... I'm fortunate to be playing with an amazingly talented group of folks. Bios below ...

Jennifer Heinert O'Leary sings with the Cleveland Orchestra Chorus and lives in Ohio City with her family. She is Special Counsel to Cleveland City Council.

Dan Bruce is a recent transplant to Ohio after spending a decade as an important member of Chicago’s jazz community. He is active throughout the Midwest and nationally as a performer, recording artist, composer and educator. He has performed on more than twenty albums as a sideman, and is releasing his second album as a leader this summer. As a performer and recording artist, Bruce has had the opportunity to work with a number of eminent musicians including Seamus Blake, Ali Jackson, Dan Wall, Lynn Seaton, and The Cleveland Jazz Orchestra. Dan Bruce is a recent transplant to Ohio after spending a decade as an important member of Chicago’s jazz community. He is active throughout the Midwest and nationally as a performer, recording artist, composer and educator. He has performed on more than twenty albums as a sideman, and is releasing his second album as a leader this summer. As a performer and recording artist, Bruce has had the opportunity to work with a number of eminent musicians including Seamus Blake, Ali Jackson, Dan Wall, Lynn Seaton, and The Cleveland Jazz Orchestra.

A native of Oberlin, Ohio, bassist Aidan Plank enjoys performing a diverse range of music throughout Northern Ohio. He studied with bassist and composer David Morgan as well as with Kevin Switalski of the Cleveland Orchestra. Aidan is a graduate of Cleveland State University. Aidan has performed with Dan Wall, Joe Lovano, Judi Silvano, Joe Maneri, Janis Siegel, Frankie Avalon, Tierney Sutton, and many others. Aidan played baroque bass in the premier of Joseph-Nicolas-Pancrace Royer’s Le Pouvoir de l’Amour (composed in 1743) in 2002 at Oberlin College as well as in the world premier of Randall Woolf and Robin Stranahan’s ‘pop-up’ opera Frozen Community, produced by Real Time Opera in 2013. Along with enjoying playing in the Cleveland Jazz Orchestra, Aidan can currently be seen performing explorations of improvisation in duo with guitarist Daniel Lippel. Aidan teaches in the Jazz Studies program at Kent State University, as well as at Cuyahoga Community College’s “Jazz Prep Program”.


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How Life Flourishes in a Dying City: Cleveland Magazine

3/1/2019

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How to Live in Ruins is featured in the Feb. 2019 issue of Cleveland Magazine. Here's a quote from the story:

“Cleveland is the kind of place where, if you grew up here, it stays with you and becomes the master narrative that shapes your experiences,” says the Cleveland State University graduate. “These poems get at the universal experience of living in the Rust Belt, a place that is dying and being remade at the same time.”

Read the full story here.

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And we've launched!

1/12/2019

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Here are some photos from last night's book launch at Loganberry Books. It was so much fun! Many thanks to Jim Garrett and Diane Vogel Ferri for their wonderful readings of their work. Pick up a copy of their poetry books, as well as How to Live in Ruins, at Loganberry or another bookstore. Support your indies! 
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this is not goodbye: thoughts on leaving lit cleveland

12/19/2018

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Last night, I attended my final event as executive director of Lit Cleveland, our annual holiday mixer at CLE Urban Winery (click on the image to the left to watch the video). Of course, as soon as we'd set the date I learned from a fellow board member whose kids attend the same school as mine, Campus International School in Cleveland, that our winter concert was the same night. After a series of emails to board members, as well as assigning new executive director Christine Howey her first task of "hauling shit," as she memorably put it, I delegated the event setup (something I normally would have done with volunteers) to them. Man, that felt good. And a perfect hand-off, in a way. Not that the job involves hauling a lot of shit ... well, yeah, it kinda does. OK, I guess it's actually the perfect metaphor for transitioning, since being director entails logistical behind-the-scenes magic-making to create events and programs (AKA "hauling shit").

I spent the night catching up with old friends, receiving compliments, and generally trying to avoid doing any work or talking shop. It was nice to see so many people (the room was full with about 60 people) and know that my work had made a difference in the community. Board member Aaron Schmidt stood on a chair (we also lacked a sound system) and feted my work over the past four years, and then I stood on the same chair and talked about what it's meant to me to help start a now-successful literary arts nonprofit in Cleveland and thanked everyone for their support. As I told folks at the event, I feel lucky to have been the vessel (wait, that sounds too religious -- vehicle? beast of burden? jalopy?) that has helped start and grow this community-supported organization. Now, others will help bring Lit Cleveland to the next level.

I have a feeling I'll write more about this later, but here are five takeaways I'd like to share about being a nonprofit executive director.

  • To be successful as an ED, you have to not only understand the vision but also execute it as well. That's a cliche, but here's the point -- it's largely tactical. If I ever thought I'd spend my days dreaming up grand new program concepts or writing (and I didn't think that) I would have been disillusioned. I designed programs, yes, but that meant answering emails, fixing printers, updating databases, sending newsletters etc. In short, you don't know the true extent of "hauling shit" until you're knee deep in it. None of this is bad, and my previous nonprofit work helped prepare me for it. LOL!
  • Working with a board is hard. Our board is great overall, it's the structure that's challenging. Imagine your desk is in the middle of a circular glass-walled room. Board members -- essentially strangers, since you don't necessarily interact with them on a daily basis -- come by and watch you work without really knowing what you're doing. Every couple months they offer you a bunch of pithy strategic thoughts and random bits of advice and then go away again. The good ones (which, to be clear, is most) attend committee meetings and pay attention to details. You have to translate their ideas into action. Once a year they also, supposedly, evaluate your performance. The trick is providing them enough information to do their jobs -- governance -- while gaining their support when you need it.
  • Being self-motivated is critical. When board members go away, which they will because they have jobs, families and other responsibilities, doing the work requires not only a large amount of day-to-day decision making but also clear end goals. What does the organization want to accomplish? What do you personally want to accomplish? It can be lonely, frustrating and tough. I've had mountaintop moments and times when I thought, is this task ever going to end? I just want to get on the floor and play blocks with my kid. Again, the work is very satisfying but there's something kind of monastic about it -- and sometimes you just want to join the party and have a friggin' drink, instead of manning the registration desk.
  • It's not a job, it's a marriage. This is something former PWLGC/The Lit director Darlene Montonaro said to me, and it's so true. I woke up and went to bed thinking about Lit Cleveland. When mistakes happened, they kept me up. When there were board issues I couldn't let them go. I can't complain because I also finished two poetry books in my off-hours while working as ED, but when the work began crowding out creative ideas then I knew I had to go. It's a weird combo of watching your baby walk for the first time and then feeling depressed that all you seem to do is exist to take care of it. As it grows it gets easier because you have more support, but harder because there's more to administer.
  • If you want to be the person in the front of the room, either teaching, reading or performing, don't be ED. I'm not saying artists can't run nonprofits. There are cases where they figure it out. But I would argue that the most successful and long-lasting ED's are probably not full-time artists. Their primary desire is to work with the community to help build a successful organization, not write and publish and sell books. Although it's a much harder financial path to sustain yourself, it's what I want to do and I'm going to continue to pursue it (now with more time on my hands). I'm fortunate to have wonderful support from a fantastic partner, Katherine, and also a great family that helps sustain me.

One of my memories from last night's event were all the people who came up to me and said, we'll still see you next year, right?  It's satisfying to know that there's still a place for me here, if nothing else as a teacher. Next year, I'm looking forward to finding more balance in my life, helping with Lit CLE, and cheering on the next executive director. Onward!

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How to Live in Ruins Book Launch

11/28/2018

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Loganberry Books on Larchmere has always been one of my favorite bookstores. The space is beautiful, it's locally-owned, and it's big enough that you can get lost in it. (Be careful. You might find yourself coming out an hour later with eight books in hand -- not that that's a bad thing.)

I'm holding my book launch party there on Friday, January 11th from 630-8:30 pm. Please join me. There will be wine, some snacks and good conversation. I'll be reading with poets Jim Garrett and Diane Vogel Ferri, who also have new books out from Finishing Line Press.

In Jim's new chapbook The Sound of Water, he "returns to his summers as a boy on the beaches of the Jersey shore," as George Bilgere writes in his blurb of the book. "You can taste the salt water in these poems and hear the waves and seagulls and the ancient laughter of his family on the beach."

Diane's new chapbook The Volume of Our Incongruity draws from personal experiences over a lifetime. "These are poems for our times, stirring a compelling swirl where the past intersects with the present, where hope for the future can spring from a single sonogram," writes Gail Bellamy.

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thanksgiving cultural feast

11/27/2018

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I had time, albeit not as much as I wanted, to dig into some reading, watching and listening along with seeing friends and family and stuffing myself with turkey over Thanksgiving break. Here are some recommendations:

  • On family and politics, Of Monuments, Arguments, Vampires and Thanksgiving by Maureen Dowd

  • This weekend, I watched The Florida Project, which many critics felt was snubbed by this year's Oscars -- you gotta see it

  • The White Album has been my favorite Beatles album since I bought it on vinyl at Record Revolution in the late 80s for a buck -- so seeing The George Martins play it live at the Music Box was a treat. Their next show is in Akron on Dec. 28th. Check them out on Youtube.
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Lee Chilcote :

Poet, journalist, and nonfiction writer
© Lee Chilcote 2018
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