Past Residents
Brian Turner, Poet - Marfa, Summer 2008
Brian Turner is a soldier-poet whose debut book of poems, Here, Bullet, won the New York Times “Editor’s Choice” selection. His poetry has been published in Poetry Daily, The Georgia Review and other journals, and in the Voices in Wartime Anthology. Here, Bullet is a harrowing, beautiful first-person account of the Iraq war featuring poems that reflect Turner’s experiences as a soldier. The poems speak with compassion, sympathy, and horror of the first-hand experience of war and with immediacy of loss, beauty, comradeship, and longing for home and the familiar; he deplores the violence and acknowledges the grief and terror of war.
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
Judy Tuwaletstiwa, Artist and Writer - Marfa, Fall 2000
Judy Tuwaletstiwa lives and works on the Hopi reservation in Kykotsmovi, Arizona. Her artwork has been shown in many solo and group exhibitions during the last 25 years. She has also taught poetry workshops throughout the United States and has received three artist-in-residence grants from the California State Arts Council.
While in residence, she worked on a book project that involved reviewing her 30 years of writing, journals, and images.
“What a gift: a light-filled, beautiful house, a welcoming town, a landscape that invites the spirit to expand, uninterrupted time to float in the waters of the unconscious, meaningful exchanges with other writers and artists. Nurtured in the generosity of the Lannan Residency, I began my book, Making Breath Visible.”
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
Don Usner, Writer - Marfa, Spring 2000
During his three-week residency, Don Usner worked on a book documenting the cultural life of Chimayó, New Mexico. In his final report to the foundation he stated that “…rather than a simple recounting of facts or a catalogue of elements of place, I felt compelled to create semi-fictional vignettes. To produce them, I had to stretch my writing and imagining abilities in ways that I hadn’t anticipated.”
This forthcoming work will be published in both English and Spanish. When he is not writing, Mr. Usner works as a professional photographer. He lives in Chimayó, New Mexico.
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
Jean Valentine, Writer and Poet - Marfa, Fall 2000
Jean Valentine was born in 1934 and graduated from Radcliff in 1956. She won the Yale Younger Poets Prize in 1964 for her first book, Dream Barker. Her other books include Pilgrims; Ordinary Thing; The Messenger; Growing Darkness, Growing Light; and The Cradle of the Real Life.
She has received both NEA and Guggenheim grants. She lives in New York and teaches at Sarah Lawrence. While in residence, she worked on her next volume of poems.
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
Patricia Vigderman, Writer - Marfa, Winter 2002
Patricia Vigderman is a writer, translator and former magazine editor whose essays and reviews have appeared in the Boston Review, Nation, New York Times, Parabola and other publications. She translated from French Ecology and Politics by André Gorz and A Poet Encounters Solidarity by Czeslaw Milosz. She teaches film and creative writing at Kenyon College.
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
Binyavanga Wainaina, Writer - Marfa, Fall 2007
Binyavanga Wainaina was born in Kenya in 1971. He is an author, journalist, and the founding editor of the literary magazine, Kwani?. In 2002 he won the prestigious Caine Prize for literature for his short story Discovering Home. His writings have been featured in The EastAfrican, National Geographic, Granta, The New York Times and The Guardian UK. He is presently a Writer-in-Residence at Union College in Schenectady, NY, where he is teaching, lecturing and working on a novel.
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
Frank X Walker, Poet - Marfa, Winter 2007
Frank X Walker is a co-founder of the Affrilachian Poets and teaches at Eastern Kentucky University. He was awarded a Lannan Literary Fellowship in 2005. His poetry books include Buffalo Dance:The Journey of York and the recent Black Box. Mr. Walker is a native of Danville, KY, and is the editor of Eclipsing a Nappy New Millennium. He lives in Cincinnati, OH.
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
David Foster Wallace, Writer - Marfa, Summer 2000
David Foster Wallace is the author of the novel Infinite Jest; three short story collections, The Broom of the System, The Girl with Curious Hair, and Brief Interviews with Hideous Men; and a collection of essays, A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again. Mr. Wallace, who received a Lannan Literary Award for Fiction in 1996, teaches at Illinois State University in Bloomington. Mr. Wallace worked on his new fiction during his residency.
“The whole trans-Pecos is haunted. Some of this is the high desert, where nothing has a shadow and stormclouds seem just out of reach. Some of it is the quiet, which is so profound it becomes its own hum. It is country that wants nothing from you, where it becomes impossible to take yourself seriously. A fruitful state to be in, work-wise, usually.”
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
Dora-Linda Wang, Writer and Poet - Marfa, Fall 2002
Dora-Linda Wang, born in Sao Paulo, Brazil, to parents who had fled the Sino-Japanese War and the Communist Revolution in China, is a writer and psychiatrist interested in how the traumas of war, migration and exile are passed down through generations. She explores this in her memoir, part of which has been published by the Asian Pacific American Journal.
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
Rosanna Warren, Poet - Marfa, Winter 2005
Rosanna Warren is a poet, writer, and educator. She is the author of the poetry collections Departure, Stained Glass, Each Leaf Shines Separate, and Snow Day. She currently teaches at Boston University as the Emma MacLachlan Metcalf Professor of the Humanities and Professor of English and Modern Foreign Languages and Literatures.
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
Brad Watson, Writer - Marfa, Spring 2006
Brad Watson was born in Mississippi and is the author of two books, a collection of stories entitled Last Days of the Dog-Men for which he won the Sue Kauffman Award of the American Academy of Arts and Letters for first collection of stories, and a novel, The Heaven of Mercury, a finalist for the National Book Award. He has worked as a journalist and has taught creative writing at Harvard, the University of Wyoming, the University of Alabama, and elsewhere.
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
Joanna Weber, Curator - Marfa, Fall 2000
Joanna Weber is currently the acting curator of the Department of European and Contemporary Art at the Yale University Art Gallery.
Her exhibitions include Philip Guston: A New Alphabet, the late transition in 2000; Modernists: Robert Mangold, Ellsworth Kelly, Ad Reinhardt, Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock, Louise Nevelson, Robert Motherwell, Agnes Martin in 1998; and Photorealism: Ralph Goings, Robert Bechtle, Robert Cottingham, Bruce Everett, Idelle Weber, Chuck Close and Sylvia Plimack Mangold in 1997.
During her residency, Ms. Weber worked on a book on Agnes Martin entitled Space for the Sacred.
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
Steven F. White, Poet and Writer - Marfa, Spring 2003
Steven F. White has translated and edited anthologies of poetry from Nicaragua, Chile and Brazil. With Greg Simon, he translated Federico García Lorca’s Poet in New York.
His recent books include a translation of the screenplay for Cruz e Sousa: The Banished Poet by Brazilian filmmaker Sylvio Back, the anthology Ayahuasca Reader: Encounters with the Amazon’s Sacred Vine and Fire that Engenders Fire, a book of poems in a bilingual edition.
He currently teaches in the Department of Modern Languages at St. Lawrence University.
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
Terri-Lynn Williams-Davidson, Activist, Writer - Marfa, Summer 2005
Terri-Lynn Williams-Davidson is a member of the Haida Nation, from the village of Skidegate, Haida Gwaii. She has lectured and published on aboriginal law, particularly as it relates to cultural heritage, environmental protection, forestry, and has taught environmental law at the Centre for Indigenous-Environmental Research in Winnipeg, Manitoba. An accomplished singer and dancer, Ms. Williams-Davidson has a strong passion for cultural perpetuation and in 1978 co-founded the Skidegate Haida Dancers. She and her husband, artist Robert Davidson, attend and participate in potlatches and ceremonies, and often return to connect with the land and people of Haida Gwaii.
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
Sean Wilsey, Writer - Marfa, Summer 2000
Sean Wilsey’s work has been published in The Los Angeles Times Book Review, McSweeny’s, The New Yorker, and The Washington Post Magazine. Mr. Wilsey has worked as an assistant editor at the New Yorker and as a letters correspondent at Newsweek.
He is currently an editor and contributing writer at McSweeny’s. During his residency, Mr. Wilsey worked on a book that he describes as “a blend of reporting and memoir.”
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
Christian Wiman, Poet - Marfa, Spring 2008
Christian Wiman is the author of two books of poetry, The Long Home (Story Line Press, 1998), which won the Nicholas Roerich Poetry Prize, and most recently, Hard Night (Copper Canyon Press, 2005). His poems and essays appear widely in anthologies and magazines, including The Atlantic Monthly, Harper’s, Slate, The Threepenny Review and The New Criterion. He has received numerous fellowships and awards, including a Pushcart Prize and a Gerald Freund Grant from the Whiting Foundation. He is the editor of Poetry magazine and lives in Chicago.
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
Larry Woiwode, Writer - Marfa, Spring 2003
Larry Woiwode was born in North Dakota and began his writing life under the mentorship of the New Yorker editor William Maxwell. He is the author of Beyond the Bedroom Wall; What I Think I Did: A Season of Survival in Two Acts; Poppa John; Born Brothers; Indian Affairs; and Silent Passengers.
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
C.D. Wright, Poet - Marfa, Summer 2003
C.D. Wright can be described in many ways: she is an experimental writer, a Southern writer, and a socially committed writer, yet she continuously reinvents herself with each new volume. Much of her poetry is rooted in the landscape and people of her childhood in the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas.
She has written ten volumes of poetry and recently published Cooling Time, a book comprised of poetry, memoir and essay. In it she writes, “Many writers maintain a guarded border between language thick with hair and twigs and the reified, rarified stuff. No matter which side of the border poets live on, they tend to act as if they were being overrun. All I want is a day pass. I like to sleep in my own bed.” A recipient of a Lannan Literary Award and a MacArthur Fellowship, Wright is a professor of English at Brown University. With her husband, poet Forrest Gander, she edits Lost Roads Publishers.
I could hear the scales fall from my eyes when I walked into my Marfa study. Watching the birds dip in their bath and the breeze stirring the stippo grass--anything could come up. There isn’t a better place to face the light of the page, at least I have never been there.
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
JoAnn Wypijewski, Writer - Marfa, Winter 2006
JoAnn Wypijewski is an independent journalist and columnist for Mother Jones magazine. For eighteen years, from 1982 to 2000, she was an editor at The Nation magazine. She has written for that magazine, as well as for Harper’s, CounterPunch, The New York Times Magazine, The Guardian of London and other publications. She is the editor of several books including Painting by Numbers: Komar and Melamid’s Scientific Guide to Art, which was called “a wonderfully tricky work of art” by The New York Times editorial page, and The Thirty Years Wars: Dispatches and Diversions of a Radical Journalist, 1965-1994, the collected work of Andrew Kopkind. Wypijewski lives in New York City, where she has been active for tenants’ rights and preservation of the Lower East Side since 1980. She is one of the founders and president of Kopkind, a summer project for radical journalists and organizers based in Guilford, Vermont, and dedicated to the memory of Andrew Kopkind.
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
Matthew Zapruder, Poet - Marfa, Fall 2007
Matthew Zapruder is the author of American Linden (Tupelo Press 2002), and of The Pajamaist (Copper Canyon, 2006). His poems have appeared in The Boston Review, Fence, Alaska Quarterly Review, Open City, Painted Bride Quarterly, Bomb, Jubilat, Harvard Review, The New Republic and The New Yorker. He teaches poetry in the MFA Program in Creative Writing at the New School, works as an Editor with Wave Books, and is co-curator of the KGB Monday Night Poetry Reading Series.
Bio and Cross Links ...Hide
Previous Page | « First < 5 6 7
Residency Area
Explore Lannan
2006 Lannan Cultural Freedom Prize awarded to Robert Fisk
Lannan Foundation announced that it has awarded its 2006 Lifetime Achievement Prize for Cultural Freedom to the British journalist and author Robert Fisk.
Continued...
From Cultural Freedom