Mostrando postagens com marcador will. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador will. Mostrar todas as postagens

segunda-feira, 22 de agosto de 2011

THE POWER OF POETRY



Language level: C1 Advanced
Speaker: Mark Worden
Standard: British accent


The Power of Poetry

Will Stone is an award-winning English poet and translator. He recently attended the Poetry on the Lake Festival and it was here that he met with Speak Up. We began by asking him what had first attracted him to poetry:

Will Stone
(Standard English accent)

It was just something that came, really. Well, I was always good at English at school and I used t write stories, and that was obviously my forte, but I didn’t really take it up later on, English. I probably should have done a degree, but for some reason I didn’t and then the poetry just started…well, actually I started writing songs first, I was more of a musician, and I wrote a lot of songs, I had a long period of writing songs, and then I sort of…that sort of died off and I started writing poetry more, so it came out of the song.

SOCIETY TODAY

In 2008 Will Stone received the Glen Dimplex Poetry Award. this was for his book, Glaciation, which one critic called “a collection of poems of oblique and uncomfortable beauty.” The Glen Dimplex is in fact an Irish award. Will Stone believes that his poetry is considered too heavy for Britain audiences, who tend to prefer lighter, less serious work:

Will Stone:

I’m not saying that it’s all bad, but I just think a lot of what is most obvious, or what Is most evident, to people, seems to be the same genre of poetry all the time because partly that’s because that’s what people relate to, and it’s what people are…’cause a lot of people in England were turned off poetry by having to do it at school, so anything that’s difficult, or got any real depth, it’s not easy for them to engage with it. I think they tend to be more drawn to a kind of poetry that is more of an entertainment, or something that sort of has part entertainment and part…it has some meaning that corresponds with people, but it isn’t always something that your really need to think about for too long. You know, it’s like an instant hit and then it’s over, which kind of reflects our society.

quinta-feira, 7 de abril de 2011

AFFORDABLE ART

Source: www.speakup.com.br
Standard: American and British accent
Language level: Pre-intermediate






AFFORDABLE ART

The Affordable Arts Fair (AAF) is one of London’s most important and popular contemporary art events. It’s an art fair with a difference. The atmosphere is relaxed, and the prices are low. That’s because there is a maximum price limit of £3.000 (€3.400).The fair is at the Battersea Evolution arena in Battersea Park., in south London, from March 10th to 13th.

A GREAT IDEA

Will Ramsey is the founder of the AAF. Interest in art increased in the 1990s, and Ramsey, wanted to open the exclusive art world to everyone. In 1996, he opened the gallery Art Warehouse in Putney, London. He created a relaxed atmosphere and sold new artists’ work at relatively low prices – from €55 to £2.800.

The Art Warehouse was a big success. Ramsey decided to organise the first AAF in October 1999. The fair attracted 150 artists and over 10.000 visitors. Today the London fair attracts 25.000 visitors and the AAF is a global phenomenon. There are also AAF events in Amsterdam, Paris, Brussels, New York and Singapore.

THE ART OF LOVE

Artist Rachael Edgar is a five-year participant at the AAF. She says, “It’s brilliant! People come and buy art for the first time in their lives. And there’s a rest mix of work, from painting to sculpture to photography to printmaking.” This year Edgard brings “Love is a Wager in an Open Car” (far left): it will cost you just €255.

New artist Orlando Lund has visited the fir several times, and he bought a Peter Blake print five years ago. He says. “The AAF definitely inspires me, and influenced the type of work I do.” He explains. “You see the wok of a new artist and think ‘Wow!’ and then you think ‘I could do that.’

PASSION

The fair offers new and experienced collectors a wide range of works, from Paul Bower’s inexpensive print. “You Are Free” (€187) to established artist Christine Reliton and Tom Marine’s Three Fish XI” (bellow) at €2.550. art advisor Thea Westreich says. “For some people, it’s a party, and everyone loves a party! For some, it’s an investment. And, for others, it’s their passion.”

Affordable Arts Fair
Battersea Evolution
Battersea Park, London
Information +44 (0) 870 777 2255

Will’s Art Warehouse
180 Lower Richmond Road.
Putney, London SW15 1LY
Tel: +44 (0) 20 8246 4840
Email: info@ills-art.com