Cloud House Poetry Archives

Cloud House Poetry Archives Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Cloud House Poetry Archives, Social service, Catskill, NY.

The Cloud House is a legendary San Francisco center for the literary arts with an internationally recognized audiovisual archive of historic poetry performances. What sets this work apart from other media collections, beyond its vast breadth and depth, is the quality of our videographic and stereophonic field recordings that convey the living presence of the poet/artist.

https://www.kerouac.com/irving-rosenthal-dies-at-91/
04/30/2022

https://www.kerouac.com/irving-rosenthal-dies-at-91/

ving Rosenthal (October 9, 1930 – April 22, 2022), writer, underground publisher, and editor of Big Table, died Friday at Friends of Perfection (Kaliflower), the San Francisco commune he founded in 1967.

Please sign this petition to change the name of the mini park at Page and Laguna to Diane DiPrima Park. https://sign.mov...
01/17/2021

Please sign this petition to change the name of the mini park at Page and Laguna to Diane DiPrima Park.

https://sign.moveon.org/petitions/diane-diprima-park?fbclid=IwAR2-exzQ4nTrNmCLt-XdA4o1HpymARoaCqB0mllyanl-OclI5snAdepjwSM

PETITION to Rename Page-Laguna Park as “Diane di Prima Park” Diane Rose di Prima (1934-2020), America’s most influential female poet of the past three-quarter-century, lived, wrote, taught, and worked in San Francisco from 1968 until her passing in 2020. She was the author of approximately 50 ...

Please sign this petition to help convince SF Park & Rec to rename the mini-park at Page and Laguna to Diane diPrima Par...
12/17/2020

Please sign this petition to help convince SF Park & Rec to rename the mini-park at Page and Laguna to Diane diPrima Park!

Diane Rose DiPrima (1934-2020) lived, wrote, taught and worked in San Francisco from 1968 until her passing in 2020. She was the author of dozens of books of poetry, drama and prose. She was the 2009 San Francisco Poet Laureate and lived in the immediate vicinity of the park in question for over 20....

Message from Kush:
10/31/2020

Message from Kush:

10/26/2020

In March of 2007, I pulled a copy of Diane di Prima’s prose and poetry collection Dinners and Nightmares off my bookshelf. At the time, I was in the midst of

10/26/2020

Diane di Prima (August 6, 1934 – October 25, 2020)

It is with much sadness that City Lights notes the passing of one of the greatest and most characteristically revolutionary poets associated with our press, Diane di Prima. Diane died yesterday due to never-resolved complications stemming from a fall a few years ago. She began her work as a poet in New York City, where she started publishing the stapled mimeo magazine The Floating Bear with co-editor LeRoi Jones (Amiri Baraka) in 1961, the same year she co-founded the New York Poets Theatre. She would go on to attain notoriety with her Olympia Press novel, Memoirs of a Beatnik (1969), a fictionalized account of her bohemian life in Manhattan at the turn of the ’60s. Relocating to San Francisco and becoming a stalwart member of the late ’60s counterculture, Diana published her signature volume Revolutionary Letters in 1971 as part of the City Lights Pocket Poets Series. She would continue to add to this volume—part poetic manifesto, part how-to guide to rabble-rousing and avoiding arrest—for the rest of her life. Her later work with City Lights included such volumes as Pieces of a Song: Selected Poems (1980) and The Poetry Deal (2014), a book commemorating her tenure as San Francisco Poet Laureate. Other important works include her ongoing serial poem Loba, published as one volume by Penguin in 1978, and Recollections of My Life as a Woman (2001), a de-fictionalized account of the period first chronicled by Memoirs of a Beatnik.

Diane’s distinctive voice and all-around toughness will be sorely missed during these trying times. A fiery personality, Diane could excoriate the powers of systemic oppression in this country like no one else, but we also wish to acknowledge her penchant for enchantment and wonder, as seen in “Revolutionary Letter #46”:

And as you learn the magic, learn to believe it

Don’t be “surprised” when it works, you undercut

your power.

City Lights sends our love to her husband Shep and her entire family.

10/26/2020

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Catskill, NY
12414

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