Description
Poetry. Art. "John Trause's learned, at times daffy, provocations outdo the achievements of his two patron saints—the snarkily crafty Catullus, and the outrageously conceptual Duchamp. What Trause gets, which neither predecessor could, is how exhilarating art is in its infatuation with freedom—and how art must, true to its muse, tip poetry akilter. Trause is a classicist whose work is finely attuned to both the music and rhetoric of the western poetic tradition. Yet his poems contain no niceties. PICTURE THIS possesses an authentic wit unique and more valuable than readers may first realize, surprising in its risks."—Burt Kimmelman
Author Bio
John J. Trause, Director of Oradell Public Library and former reference and periodicals librarian at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, is the author of Eye Candy for Andy: 13 Most Beautiful...Poems for Andy Warhol's Screen Tests (Finishing Line Press, 2013); Inside Out, Upside Down, and Round and Round (Nirala Publications, 2012); Seriously Serial (Poets Wear Prada, 2007; rev. ed. 2014); and Latter-Day Litany (Éditions élastiques, 1996), the latter staged Off-Off Broadway. His book of fictive translations, found poems, and manipulated texts, Exercises in High Treason (2016), was published by Great Weather for Media. His translations, poetry, and visual work appear internationally in many journals and anthologies, including the artists' periodical Crossings, the Dada journal Maintenant, Offerta Speciale, the Great Weather for Media anthologies It's Animal but Merciful (2012) and I Let Go of the Stars in My Hand (2014), and in RABBIT EARS (NYQ Books, 2015). He is the subject of a 30-on-30-in-30 essay on The Operating System, written by Don Zirilli, and an author of an essay on Baroness Elsa at the same site, both in April 2016. He has shared the stage with Steven Van Zandt, Anne Waldman, Karen Finley, Andrei Codrescu, and Jerome Rothenberg; the page with Billy Collins, Lita Hornick, William Carlos Williams, Woody Allen, Ted Kooser, Victor Buono, and Pope John Paul II; and the cage with the Cumaean Sibyl, Ezra Pound, Hannibal Lector, Andrei Chikatilo, and George "The Animal" Steele. He is a founder of the William Carlos Williams Poetry Cooperative in Rutherford, NJ, and the former host and curator of its monthly reading series. His artwork has been exhibited in The MoMA Staff Show (1995) and appears in the permanent collection of The Museum of Menstruation (New Carrollton, Md.) to whose website he has contributed.
Author City: WOOD RIDGE, NJ USA