Fortner Anderson

Last updated
Fortner Anderson
Born1955 (age 6869)
Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.
Occupation Poet, performer
NationalityCanadian
Period2000s–present
Notable worksPoints of Departure, Annunciations, Solitary pleasures
Website
www.fortneranderson.com

Fortner Anderson (born 1955) is an American-born poet, performance artist, and visual artist who has lived in Montreal, Quebec, since 1976. [1] He is the author of several volumes of poetry and has published many audio recordings of his spoken word performances, and is known for innovative use of technology to present poetry readings.

Contents

Early life

Anderson was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Career

In 1985, Anderson founded Dial-A-Poem Montreal, a free, 24-hour telephone hotline that users could call to hear a different poem each day, usually read by its author. About 150 poets contributed to the project, mostly from the Montreal area. [2] On its first anniversary, the participants organized the “100 Poets" party, a gallery event which included eleven continuous hours of recorded audio and video poetry performance as well as live contributions from dozens of attending poets. [3] Dial-A-Poem Montreal was inspired by a similar poetry hotline service operated by performance poet John Giorno in New York from 1968 to 1972, also called Dial-A-Poem.

In 1987, Anderson collaborated with writer Ian Ferrier and illustrator Phillip MacKenzie to publish The Heart of the Machine, an electronic interactive serial novel accessible through one of several information services that users would have to dial up from their computers. [4]

In the 1990s Anderson and Ferrier began broadcasting recordings of poetry on the McGill University campus community radio station, CKUT-FM; the pair received a Standard Broadcasting Award for this innovation. [5] Anderson continued to host a weekly radio program called "Dromotexte / Pirate Bloc Radio" on CKUT-FM, featuring spoken word and poetry recordings. He also served as the chair of CKUT's board of directors. [6]

For a number of years Anderson worked as a business agent for the Directors Guild of Canada. [7] [8]

In 2007, he was awarded the La Voix Électrique / The Voice Electric prize for career achievement in poetry, an award presented in collaboration by two Montreal-based organizations, Les Filles électriques and Wired on Words. [9]

In 2011, Anderson published a book of poetry, Solitary Pleasures, with designer Fabrizio Gilardino. Anderson's poem, mainly about activities and emotions in daily life, were rendered by Gilardino through creative typography followed by digital alteration. [10] The book was accompanied by a CD of Anderson reading the poems. [11] His 2012 release, Annunciations, a book with three audio CDs, was aired on campus and community radio. [12]

Anderson's poetry has also been included in the anthologies Short Fuse: The Global Anthology of New Fusion Poetry and Poetry Nation: the North American anthology of fusion poetry, as well as in the literary periodical Estuaire.

In 2018 and 2019 he participates to the exhibition ‘Buveurs de quintessences’ curated by Caroline Andrieux that took place in Montreal at the Fonderie Darling [13] and in Luxembourg City at the Casino Luxembourg. [14]

Works

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Dial-A-Poem Montreal was a phone-based service started in 1985 by Fortner Anderson, who was inspired by John Giorno's Dial-A-Poem and wanted to expand poetry beyond the limits of print. Listeners in Montreal could call 843-7636 (THE-POEM) anytime of the day to hear a poem. The service ran from September 1985 to July 1987 and ended because Anderson lacked the time and money needed for the project to continue. He produced the recordings himself and funded the project with his own money, sales of Clifford Duffy's first book Blue Dog Plus, individual sponsorships, and sponsorships by bookstores, local craftsmen, and schools. Participating bookstores included The Word Bookstore, Argo Bookshop, The Double Hook Book Shop, Steve Welch Books, and Véhicule Press. Anderson reported that in the first year, the service received about 200 phone calls a day and that over 150 poets contributed. He described the content of the poems as containing "themes of reaction to society's structures and structures, personal and social violence, topical issues of sex and gender, and people coping with alienation and the shifting ground of their own personalities."

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References

  1. "Fortner Anderson - SMCQ". Société de musique contemporaine du Québec (SMCQ). Retrieved 2019-08-09.
  2. Farber, Michael (September 16, 1986). "A line of poetry just a dial away". The Montreal Gazette. Retrieved October 14, 2019.
  3. "Community Calendar: Montreal Dial-a-Poem". The Montreal Gazette. September 18, 1986. Retrieved October 14, 2019.
  4. Hill, Heather (August 1, 1987). "First electronic novel hits computer screens". The Montreal Gazette. Retrieved October 14, 2019.
  5. Joel Yanofsky (2011). "Enfin Visibles! Quebec's Literary Community". In Michael Mirolla (ed.). Minority Report: An Alternative History of English-language Arts in Quebec. Guernica Editions. p. 147. ISBN   978-1-55071-355-8.
  6. "CKUT: Rendez-vous radio for Montreal's diverse communities". McGill Reporter, September 13, 2001 - Volume 34 Number 01
  7. "Couples: Some work apart". The Gazette, Montreal, Quebec, 11 Feb 2006, Page 111
  8. "Quebec television directors hike rates". Playback, April 5, 1999
  9. "First "The Voice Electric" Award goes to Montreal performer Fortner Anderson" (Press release). Montreal. November 12, 2007. Archived from the original on October 14, 2019. Retrieved October 14, 2019.
  10. 1 2 "Fortresses of Solitude". Montreal Review of Books, Fall 2012 issue. Review by Abby Paige
  11. "Fortner Anderson — solitary pleasures (& Records) CD + Book". Monk Mink Pink Punk, issue 23. June 2014. Review by Josh Ronsen
  12. "Top 30 For the Week Ending: Tuesday, February 19, 2013". CFBU 103.7 MHz - St. Catharines
  13. Clément, Éric (2018-04-05). "S'abreuver d'insolite à la Fonderie Darling". La Presse (in French). Retrieved 2021-04-11.
  14. Brausch, Marianne (2019-01-25). "Éloge du peu". Lëtzebuerger Land (in French). Retrieved 2021-04-11.
  15. 1 2 "The Exhibition Drinkers of Quintessences at Montreal's Darling Foundry Brings Together 12 Artists". WhiteHot Magazine, January 2020, review by JAMES D. CAMPBELL