The Poetry Foundation honors the Chicago Poetry Center’s 50th anniversary with an exhibition of archival materials, a documentary film premiere, and live readings and performances from CPC poets.
A Bigger Table: 50 Years of the Chicago Poetry Center will feature 50 broadsides, commemorative poetry prints, iconic vintage event posters, archival materials, and ephemera from CPC’s five-decade history. The exhibition opens on Thursday, June 27, and will be available to the public through Saturday, September 14, 2024.
“The Chicago Poetry Center has done so much over the decades to expand Chicago’s literary landscape; their efforts helped lay the groundwork for organizations like the Poetry Foundation to bring poetry to more people,” said Fred Sasaki, the Poetry Foundation’s creative director and exhibition co-curator. “It is a joy to honor CPC’s legacy by hosting this celebration of its 50 years of service to Chicago’s people and their poetry.”
On July 13, the Poetry Foundation will host a public event, which kicks off with a reception in the Foundation’s courtyard. After the reception, attendees are invited to the premiere of the documentary A Bigger Table, which explores CPC from its roots as a platform for censored writers to its present-day mission as the organization continues to build a bigger table for poets in Chicago and beyond. The film screening will be followed by readings and performances by Layla Abdullah, Helene Achanzar, and Marvin Tate and remarks by CPC’s executive director B. Metzger Sampson. Admission to the event and the exhibition are free; guests are encouraged to register in advance.
“It is an honor to usher this organization into its 50th anniversary,” said B. Metzger Sampson, executive director of the Chicago Poetry Center. “Each steward of the Chicago Poetry Center has sought to follow the legacy of those before them in creating a bigger and more inclusive table for community, for poetry, and for connection. This exhibition is an exciting opportunity for us to celebrate the innovative ways poets have widened the table at CPC and in Chicago’s literary scene each decade.”
Visiting the Poetry Foundation
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Accessibility
Readings and events include live captioning and ASL interpretation unless otherwise noted. If you have additional accessibility needs, please contact Events@PoetryFoundation.org.
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About the Chicago Poetry Center
In defiance of literary censorship in the 1950s, a group of Chicago writers and editors organized to create publication and performance spaces that welcomed queer and racially diverse contemporary voices. These organic, community-driven efforts, which included the Big Table literary magazine and reading series, were formalized in 1974 into the nonprofit Chicago Poetry Center (CPC). The title “Big Table” was chosen because a big table has room for everyone and because one of the censored writers found a note he’d written to himself that said, “Get a bigger table.”
For 50 years, CPC has remained rooted in its history of liberatory artistic practice. The organization’s programs have supported tens of thousands of Chicago Public School students in exploring their powerful voices, offered platforms for nearly a thousand poets to express themselves in writing and aloud, and engaged individuals nationwide in critical conversations around race using poetry as a springboard for transformative dialogue.
About the Poetry Foundation
The Poetry Foundation recognizes the power of words to transform lives. The Foundation works to amplify poetry and celebrate poets by fostering spaces for all to create, experience, and share poetry. Follow the Poetry Foundation on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and Twitter.