Showing posts with label Alice Pero. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alice Pero. Show all posts

Saturday, July 26, 2025

Poets, Poems Everywhere - Independence Day Parade, a Museum, a Convention - 7/2025


Poets Convertible with crew Josephine, Maja with a basket of poems and flags, poet konrad Wilk as the driver, Artur Wilk and Pam Shea ("Betsy Ross") who gave out postcards, former poet laureate Alice Pero and current poet laureate kathleen Travers.

Most of the time I have spent with poetry has been either with a page of paper or the computer screen as I write or edit my own poems and the California Quarterly.  Therefore, it was a great pleasure this July to participate in three fantastic poetry events in person! 

First I walked the route of Sunland-Tujunga's Independence Day parade, giving out 1000 poem postcards and 250 mini-flags (with two helpers) The postcards included two of my own poems, reproduced below and the first stanza of America the Beautiful, which should be American national anthem, but alas, is not... 


THE COLOR GUARD

Above the hills' crooked spine, clouds dissolve
into the azure. Dark red rose lazily unfolds its petals.

My “Mr. Lincoln” blossoms by the birch tree
with the innocence of long-lost, Polish summers.

White bark peaks from beneath green leaves.
White oleander spills over white picket fence.

The sapphire sky shines with the deepest blue of the iris.
Its yellow heart matches sunshine's purest gold,

bouncing off the brilliant sphere of the stamens
in the bridal silk of white matilla poppies.

My garden presents the colors at noon 
dressed in the red, white and blue of the flag.

At night, fireworks tear the indigo fabric
into light ribbons and multicolored sparks.
             
Fireworks scatter into chaos of laughter -
the children's delight - the Fourth of July!

(C) 2025 by Maja Trochimczy

This is a new version of a poem that earlier included references to the wonderful piece by Chares Ives, The Fourth of July that contains the best musical image of fireworks in a music history... But almost nobody in America   knows about Charles Ives, so I deleted this reference, alas...

When I gave out the other poem to one lady in the audience, she said she still had it on her fridge from last year, and I was happy to hear that,  but it is time to write a new Independence Day poem... 




INDEPENDENCE DAY


Red is the color of rocks in the Grand Canyon
White are the mountains, shining with snow.
Bue are the waves of Pacific Ocean.

Red, White and Blue - the colors of all

Red is the Earth from which we come
White is the Air that fills our lungs
Blue is the Water inside us, with Stardust

Red, White and Blue - connected in all.

Red is pure love, deep in our hearts
White is the brightness of our clear minds
Blue is serenity of well lived lives.

Red, White and Blue - freedom for all.


(C) 2018 by Maja Trochimczyk


Maja, Alice Pero and Hilda Weiss, 20/7/25

Two wee
ks later it was time for my poetry feature at Bolton Hall Museum in Tujunga - at Village Poets of Sunland Tujunga. I was co-featured with Hilda Weiss of the Poetry A Video Series and environmental activism, so I selected poems about spiritual reflections rooted in nature... Josephine recorded my 19 min. reading in two parts. I managed to read quite a few poems because I did not spend any time on ubiquitous introductions explaining the poem before it is read. I quite dis lie those, so there...



I started from a challenge to action - a spot of sunlight moving across the hills I see from my window. 

Outside my Window
 
 
A round spot of gold light appears
on the smooth slope of California hills
green in the spring, shadowed by rainclouds.
 
Suddenly, an epiphany of light
blossoms among thickening shadows, 
dusk approaching soon, much too soon.
 
The shining circle stretches into an arrow, 
points west, along the ridge. The arrow of light, 
my arrow, tells me to go, do, act, lead and follow.
Be the light, bring the light. Enlighten.
 
Before I can even reach for pen and paper
to write down this command, this call to action,
it is gone. All is shadow now. Murky darkness.
 
Yet the memory of the cloud epiphany lingers,
etched onto my retina. This spot of light,
this arrow will always be with me—

Each morning, I will turn the circle of contemplation 
into the arrow of action, the dawn star 
into a comet, inexorably reaching its end.
 
Is it not the story of my life?
This spot of light on a mountain meadow
after one winter storm, before another?
 
I catch it, hold it, and keep it safe 
among my treasures. Things not to be 
discarded. Unforgettable thoughts.
 
Another pearl for my precious necklace
woven from brilliant moments— 
jewels of a well-lived life.


(c) 2022 by Maja Trochimczyk, from Bright Skies. Selected Poems.  Reprinted here



The next bunch featured poem reproduced here - and poems An Artichoke of a Poem, Mata Boska Zielna, The Infinity Room, Dragon Fruit Awareness... that appeared in CrystaFire  Poems of Joy and Wisdom and the California Quarterly.  

Oh, the Art of Looking


Look ahead— 

wave and wave and wave

dance in the moonlight
a silver path across the ocean
shimmering horizon
stark intensity
of the Pacific

Look up—
the Milky Way
What do you see?
The spine of the world?
Buttons made of stars?
Indigo cupola with diamonds?

wave after wave after wave

Look inside—
deep into my eyes
electric currents flow
in an arc of brightness
connecting us into One
the Oneness we forgot

Now, we are alive, we are
One—the clear azure
of windswept sky—
the ruby wine
beneath roots
of the earth  

Look around—
wake up and see,

truly see where you are—
enveloped in a blanket
of time, carried
from now to now—

from wave to wave to wave

from Earth into Earth into One


(C) 2022 by Maja Trochimczyk, first published in California Quarterly 44 no. 4 


In the second part of the reading, I focused on newer poems from 2024 and those published in the anthology Crystal Fire. Poems of Joy and Wisdom (2022).  "Dragon Fruit Awareness" was already posted here, not long ago, in fact... "Grapes on a Vine" have also been reprinted on my blogs, so I'll not repost it here.  But I found a forgotten poem in my notes, and here it is (from July 2024).

Summer Bee Buzz


The bees buzz in the pin, crepe myrtle tree.
The sound of my childhood. 
I hear that enormous indent tree. I fee
those 21 stings in my head. The taste 
of fragrant amber of buckwheat honey.

My garden is tranquiin the morning before 
my neighbors get up. Only the golden orioles
make ratting noises with their harsh, 
machine-like voices. Maybe they will settle here. 
The intricate, sweet melodies of mockingbirds 
are gone. They moved on after the row of ol
oleanders was cut down. They used to bravely
fight with crows to protect their nests. 
Unfurled white stripes on gray brown tails

Now the orioles shine like pure god 
in sunlight. Such lovely plumage
Such hoarse rattles of their sounds --
                                                               Bizarre...

You cannot have everything.
                                                    You must choose.
The transient body or the timeless soul
Riches of appearance, or the deep truth of the heart. 

"My kingdom is not of this world" 
                                                -- the teacher said. 

         Indeed.

(c) 2024 by Maja T.

The reading ended with "A Declaration" with its refrain, so suitable for this reading - "I am a sovereign citizen of the galaxy"...



Six days later, I was already in Albuquerque, NM, at the convention of the National Federation of State Poetry Societies, where I represented California as the President of its State Poetry Society since 2019. It was the first time attending a meeting with 30 other State Societies' Presidents and I felt it was worth my time. These days, given I'm already past 64 (from the Beatles song), and fast approaching 68, I do what is "worth my time" and ignore things that are not... Seen from the air, the earth was covered with patterns of light and shadow,  as are our lives...


Since it was my first time in Albuquerque, I decided to visit some scenic sites - and my first choice was the Turquoise Museum. I was so impressed that I wrote about turquoise and sent my poem to its Executive Director... I think I'll place it in the California Quqarterly.




Back at the NFSPS Convention, by chance, I participated in a Slam Poetry style Haiku Death Match.  Of 16 Participants, one was crowned the Death Match Champion. Three haiku were read in each round, where two poets were set against each other, replying with a haiku to haiku.  Three-person pane judged the poems and picked the winner who got the best of three. At first, I only had two haiku ready - for I thought it was just a regular reading. But after the rues were announced I scrolled through my gmail messages and found old submissions to our Haiku Study Group Anthologies - and that was enough to find myself in semifinals, defeated by the champion Jerry Hardesty of Alabama. So much fun!  Some of these mini poems appeared in the SCHSG anthologies in 2021, 2022 and 2024. One was just printed in the CQ v. 51 no. 2 (Summer 2025).




First round haiku


Shapeshifting clouds shade
                cement prison housing blocks -
                                              longing for freedom



Roadrunner waits for me, 
                   a limp lizard in its beak -
                                                                                    Carpe Diem
 

 In SCHSG Anthology "The Taste of Sunlight" (2022) 


ollinden tree 
             in her empty courtyard -
      the scent of memories 




Second round haiku

           "let me go!"
my kite tugs on its string -
                          we dream of freedom



the flutter of wings
               interrupts my thoughts -
                                       a feather-light heart


Dead Sea Scrolls unfurl
            insights for 3 millennia
                      "you shall... you shall not..."

 In California Quarterly, v. 51, no. 2 (Summer 2025)





Third round haikn


shadow and light - 
               yes and no chase each other 
                                               in circular motion
In San Diego Poetry Annual 2023-24

 

`high school latin class
             Ars longa Vita Brevis -
                             true beauty lingers

In SCHSG Anthology "The Taste of Sunlight" (2022) 

one breath, one bite,
      one thought, one step at a time  -
                                    the measure of life

 

16 contestants and the MC, NFSPS Convention, 26/7/2025

we doze off under
protection of cloud dragon -
or is it a rabbit? 


Photos of nature and clouds by Maja T.



 



Tuesday, June 18, 2024

Alice Pero Presents Poetry Laurels to Kathleen Travers at McGroarty Arts Center, May 2024

Alice Pero and Kathleen Travers after the Passing of the Laurels, 19 May 2024.

The ceremony of "Passing of the Laurels 2024" for the 
Poets Laureate of the Foothills -   Alice Pero & Kathleen Travers was held on 19 May 2024, at the home of former Poet Laureate of California, John Steven McGroarty - McGroarty Arts Center (7570 McGroarty Terrace, Tujunga, CA 91042).  This report includes some poems read during the event, illustrated with event photos and materials from the event's program book, plus my reflections about my own term as ST Poet Laureate No. 6 in 2010-2012 (at the end).

McGroarty Arts Center 

During the ceremony the title of the local Poet Laureate changed: Poet Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga Alice Pero (2020-2024) passed the laurels to new Poet Laureate of the Foothills Kathleen Travers (2024-2026).  The introductory music was prepared and performed by pianist Daniel West and the event was hosted by the third Poet Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga, poet and community activist Joe DeCenzo. (BTW, Joe will be the Marshall of ST Independence Day Parade! Do not miss it!)

Joe Decenzo Welcomes the Audience, with Daniel West

WELCOME by Annette Bethers, Executive Director, McGroarty Arts Center highlighted the long-standing collaboration between the Poet Laureate program and the McGroarty Arts Center, not only in hosting the Passing of the Laurels biennial events, but also through the various projects of the poets. (I recall teaching a class for children 8 to 12  years old, and reading poems at opening of art exhibits; the latter was a specialty of Dorothy Skiles in her term as Poet Laureate, bringing new poems to highlight the creativity of ceramic-makers, or painters displaying their work at the Center.) 

Annette Bethers, Executive Director of McGroarty Arts Center

An overview about POET LAUREATE THROUGHOUT THE YEARS was offered by Joe DeCenzo as an introduction to past Poets Laureates, both those present (Hitt, Trochimczyk, Shea, DeCenzo, Pero), those absent, as well as those no longer with us. Each past Poet Laureate received a couple of sentences summarizing their achievements:  

1999-2001 Marlene Hitt
2001-2004 Katerina Canyon (moved to Seattle)
2004-2006 Joe DeCenzo
2006-2008 Ursula T. Gibson (died)
2008-2010 Damien Stednitz (moved)
2010-2012 Maja Trochimczyk
2012-2014 Dorothy Skiles (moved to Sacramento)
2014-2017 Elsa Frausto
2017-2020 Pamela Shea
2020-2024 Alice Pero
2024-2026 Kathleen Travers


Plaque with poets' names, made since 1999, updated in 2024. 

Joe DeCenzo presents Poets Laureate. 

Instead of adding more contemporary poets or reading work by the Village Poets or former Poets Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga, the organizers decided to honor the original owner of the McGroarty Arts Center mountain estate, JOHN STEVEN MCGROARTY by having his signature poem “JUST CALIFORNIA” read by a young student, Severine Beasley, daughter of a painter who often teaches art classes at the McGroarty Arts Center. 

Severine Beasley reads "Just California" by John Steven McGroarty.


JUST CALIFORNIA

When I am in California I am not in the West.
It is West of the West. It is just California.
—Theodore Roosevelt

'Twixt the seas and the deserts,
    'Twixt the wastes and the waves,
Between the sands of buried lands
    And ocean's coral caves;
It lies not East nor West,
    But like a scroll unfurled,
Where the hand of God hath flung it
    Down the middle of the world.

It lies where God hath spread it
    In the gladness of His eyes,
Like a flame of jeweled tapestry
    Beneath His shining skies;
With the green of woven meadows,
    The hills in golden chains,
The light of leaping rivers,
    And the flash of poppied plains.

Days rise that gleam in glory,
    Days die with sunset's breeze,
While from Cathay that was of old
    Sail countless argosies;
Morns break again in splendor
    O'er the giant, new-born West,
But of all the lands God fashioned,
    'Tis this land is the best.

Sun and dews that kiss it,
    Balmy winds that blow,
The stars in clustered diadems
    Upon its peaks of snow;
The mighty mountains o'er it,
    Below, the white seas swirled—
Just California, stretching down
    The middle of the world.
View from the window of McGroarty Arts Center at Tujunga and hills of Los Angeles National Forest

Maja Trochimczyk with Kathleen Travers's Certificate 

Declan Floyd reads his occasional poem.

IN APPRECIATION - there can be no Passing of the Laurels without congratulations and certificates from our elected representatives. (I still remember how shocked I was during my own inauguration in April 2010 to receive so many large and colorful scrolls from so many staffers of U.S. Congress, CA Senate, CA Assembly, LA City and LA County! It was "shocking" but in a good way...). So I agreed to present certificates for the outgoing and incoming Poets Laureate on behalf of  U.S. Congressman Adam Schiff, while Ricardo Flores represented in that role L.A. Councilwoman Monica Rodriguez. Then, Declan Floyd made a presentation on behalf of State Senator Anthony Portantino, a known lover of poetry and a poet himself. As a member of Sen. Portantino staff, Mr. Floyd had to live up to the credentials of his boss and entertained the audience with the poem of his own devising that described the event pretty accurately: 

The Village Poets lead with clear values and morals
And it’s great to be here at the Passing of the Laurels

To you, our honorees, KT and Alice
We all happily raise a thankful cup or chalice

Alice’s term as Poet Laureate has now come and gone
And the light of KT’s is just breaking like dawn

You both inspire us with your words and move us with your passion
While representing our community in true Tujunga fashion

We thank you for dedicating all the time you have allowed
To make every person here today enormously proud

Proud if your work, your commitment, and your grace
Proud that you make Los Angeles a better place

There is more to come from both of you, that’s something we know
But for now please accept these certificates from Senator Portantino

                                   ~ Declan Floyd, Office of Senator Anthony J. Portantino, Glendale


Alice Pero, Declan Floyd and Kathleen Travers with Sen. Portantino Certificates.


Alice Pero with Daniel West rehearsing their performance. 

Alice Pero performs Bloch with Daniel West

After the presentations of the certificates, an INTERLUDE of lovely music performance was provided by the outgoing Poet Laureate, an accomplished flautist, and pianist Daniel West who teaches at McGroarty Arts Center. They played a cheerful and melodic Suite Modale for flute and piano by Ernest Bloch. 

State Senator Anthony Portantino reads his poems and greets the poets and the audience. 

Before we were able to proceed to the key events of the afternoon, that is two poetry readings by outgoing and incoming Laureates and the Passing of the Laurels ceremony, STATE SENATOR ANTHONY PORTANTINO came in person, and read some of his own poems from a newly published poetry book. It was a welcome surprise to have one of our lawmakers and seasoned state senators share his love of poetry and his creativity with the audience. Indeed, Sen. Portantino has been the most faithful supporter of poetry and culture in the Foothills. We appreciate his creativity, wit and dedication. 

Display of books by Poets Laureate - Alice Pero, Marlene Hitt (bottom), 
and three anthologies edited by Maja Trochimczyk (top).

The FAREWELL READING of the last Poet Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga Alice Pero followed with a cross-section of her work starting from poems published in her first book Thawed Stars, and ending with new poems of great charm and whimsical inspiration.  Pero's poems are often humorous in a delicate, surreal way - with personifications of clouds, stars, and inanimate objects that all become alive and lively in her imaginative verse. 

Alice Pero at her Passing of the Laurels ceremony in 2022.

ALICE PERO served as the 10th Poet Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga from 2020 to 2024. (Officially inaugurated late due to COVID restrictions.) During her service she has continued her work with Poetry in the Schools, done special readings in the community as Laureate, taken over as Artistic Director of the Village Poets reading in Tujunga, booking luminaries in the poetry world, such as William Archila, winner of the James Levine award, internationally known poet, James Ragan, and others. She is the Monthly Contest Chair for the California State Poetry Society. Alice Pero’s poetry has been published in magazines and anthologies including Coiled Serpent, Wide Awake, Altadena Poetry Review, We Are Here: Village Poets Anthology, Nimrod, National Poetry Review, River Oak Review, Poet Lore, The Alembic, North Dakota Quarterly, The Distillery, Fox Cry Review, The Griffin, G.W. Review, California Quarterly, Pratik, Crystal Fire: Poems of Joy and Wisdom, and many others. Her first book of poetry, Thawed Stars was praised by renowned poet, Kenneth Koch, as having “clarity and surprises.” In 2017 Shabda Press published a book of poems written in Sunland Park by herself and former Sunland/ Tujunga Poet Laureate, Elsa Frausto, Sunland Park Poems.  Her most recent book, a collaboration with NYC artist, Vera Campion, Beyond Birds & Answers came out in 2021 (Elyssar Press). An accomplished flutist and former dancer, she created the performing group, Windsong Players Chamber Ensemble in 2015. Pero continues to teach poetry to children throughout the Los Angeles area and many of her students’ poems have been published in California Poets in the Schools anthologies Pero began doing public readings in 1984. She has read her poetry in dozens of venues in New York State, Los Angeles and Austin.  Ms. Pero has created dialogue poems with over 20 poets.  She continues writing poetry dialogues with many poets around the country.  www.alicepero.com | pero@earthlink.net

Among Alice's poems read as her farewell was the following, reprinted in the Program booklet:

A THIMBLEFUL OF NOW…

A thimbleful of now
with no dust or breath
I slurp it up, like nectar
of a sweet peach

On my windowsill
a potful of here
No flower grows
the air is fresh
I feel the green

Clear wind of present

***

Frog holds court
teaches tadpoles
syllabic poems

They flit 
through water
stirring mud

Light falls
in streaks
inspiring dragonflies
glorious sun dances

                                                 Alice Pero 

Alice Pero crowns Kathleen Travers with Poet's Laurels

The former laureate then presented the Poetry Laurels to the new Poet Laureate, Kathleen Travers in a touching PASSING OF THE LAURELS ceremony - that consisted of passing of the heart locket with dried olive wreath leaves from past laureate's crowns (I donated that gold locket myself when the previous plastic one broke down!), followed by placing the laurel wreath on the new Laureate's head, and the presentation of the engraved plaque listing all past and present Poets Laureate, with the added name of Kathleen Travers. 

Alice and Kathleen

The final POET LAUREATE’S READING by Kathleen Travers introduced the audience  to a range of her interests and passions, from social justice to environmental concerns, and local history.  Her verse is erudite and filled with fascinating information that is hard to come by and yet she found it and shared it to delight and surprise the audience. 

Kathleen Travers reads her poetry.

KATHLEEN TRAVERS, Poet Laureate of the Foothills, 2024-2026, is a fourth generation Angeleno. Travers has lived in her 100-year-old historic home in Sunland (which she restored) for more than 20 years.  With graduate degrees in Art History, Victorian Studies and Professional Writing, she has been the recipient of fellowships to the Prague Writers’ Festival and for post-graduate study at Cambridge University.  Formerly a high school and university educator, she is a historic restoration expert, specializing in architectural ceramic.  A preservation advocate, Kathleen authored the successful Historic-Cultural Monument applications for the Hills of Peace Cemetery and Cross of San Ysidro.  She served as docent at Bolton Hall for ten years, where she co-curated the Foothill Moderns exhibit and lectured on local artist Margaret Morrish. Founding board member of arts and equity non-profit ST Forward, and volunteer for various homeless charities for 35 years, she’s in her 3rd year on the Sunland-Tujunga Neighborhood Council. She has read her poetry at venues as diverse as Maddingley Hall, Cambridge, England, and Gasoline Alley, the L.A. Times Festival of Books and the Iguana Café.  She served on the board of the Los Angeles Poetry Festival in its glory years, and was a founding director of the Poetry Society of America in Los Angeles in the time of The Act of the Poet at Chateau Marmont. Featured in 49 local civic light opera and drama productions in decades past, and having sung with a bakers dozen of Los Angeles choral ensembles, her mezzo is currently in search of a choir, although she always has a song in her heart for life in Sunland-Tujunga.


WHAT REMAINS

      to Itzhak Perlman for November 18, 1995, Lincoln Center

The great musician staged his entrance rites,
a halting broach of center, sat, and then
the solemn pageant pared the metal truss
from limbs, and lastly raised the violin:
the bow hit gut, exploding twang and snap
sharp echoes amid gasps. And wonder, would
the litanies of lurch repeat, or mute
await fresh fiddle or new string? Eyes closed,
he signaled to begin. And modulating
every step with ease and grace, he played
to awestruck hush. Applause! He smiled “In art
sometimes we find what music we can make
with what is left.” So life, we make at first
with all we have – and then, with what remains.

                                                                              Kathleen Travers 


The audience listens to new Poet Laureate, Kathleen Travers.

After the reading, the poets posed for photos, and all guests were invited to a reception, courtesy of the BackDoor Bakery, Porto's Bakery, Moonrise Press and Maja Trochimczyk.  The books of Village Poets and former Poets Laureate were on display and some information about two recent anthologies was included in the program. 

Display of Poets Laureate books and (in the middle) the California Poet Laureate Certificate of John Steven McGroarty


WE ARE HERE: VILLAGE POETS ANTHOLOGY. Edited by Marlene Hitt and Maja Trochimczyk, We Are Here: Village Poetry Anthology presents 80 poets featured during monthly readings at Bolton Hall Museum in Tujunga, CA since 2010, as well as the group of Poets Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga who organize the readings. The readings have also been held at the McGroarty Arts Center, the former home of California Poet-Laureate 1933-1944, John Steven McGroarty. His Poet-Laureate title inspired the local Poet-Laureate program, initiated in 1999. http://moonrisepress.com/village-poets-anthology.html

 


CRYSTAL FIRE. POEMS OF JOY AND WISDOM. Edited by Maja Trochimczyk, and illustrated with paintings by Ambika Talwar,  the Crystal Fire anthology gathers poems of joy and wisdom by twelve poets: Elżbieta Czajkowska, Joe DeCenzo, Mary Elliott, Jeff Graham, Marlene Hitt, Frederick Livingston, Alice Pero, Allegra Silberstein, Jane Stuart, Ambika Talwar, Bory Thach, and Maja Trochimczyk. The poets span all ages and diverse life experiences. They include émigrés from Poland, Cambodia, and India, and those born in the U.S. College professors join community poets. Native speakers appear alongside those for whom English is the second, or even the third language. The ”joy and wisdom” they write about are also different, as each poet follows their own path and gathers unique reflections to share with their readers. Available in color, hardcover and paperback.                            https://w.moonrisepress.com/crystal-fire-anthology.html

Village Poets at the Passing of the Laurels Ceremony for Alice Pero, 9 April 2022. L to R, standing, Marlene Hitt, Joe DeCenzo, Elsa S. Frausto, and Maja Trochimczyk. Seated: Pamela Shea, Alice Pero and Dorothy Skiles

VILLAGE POETS OF SUNLAND-TUJUNGA is a group of Poets Laureate of the Foothills (formerly known as Poets-Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga) who organize monthly poetry readings in their community, write poetry, and publish books, making sure that poetry life is rich and vibrant in the Los Angeles foothills. You can read about them on the VillagePoets.com website or the VillagePoets blog. Maja Trochimczyk served as Artistic Director from 2010 to 2023, and Alice Pero since then. In 2020, the 10th anniversary of the monthly poetry readings was celebrated by the We Are Here: Village Poets Anthology, edited by Marlene Hitt and Dr. Maja Trochimczyk. Every two or three years the Village Poets organize a competition for the Poet-Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga and, in order to involve the local community in the selection of its Poet-Laureate, establish a Poetry and Literature Committee which selects the next Poet to receive their laurels and promote poetry in the Foothills. 

 Websites: • Villagepoets.blogspot.com • Villagepoets.com

Poets Laureate in 2024: standing Pamela Shea, Joe DeCenzo and Maja Trochimczyk
Seated Alice Pero, Kathleen Travers and Marlene Hitt, May 2024

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Selection of the Laureate by Poetry and Literature Committee deserved credit to:  Former Poets Laureate (Joe DeCenzo, Elsa S. Frausto, Marlene Hitt, Alice Pero, Pamela Shea, and Maja Trochimczyk) as well as Community Representatives: Annette Bethers (Executive Director of McGroarty Arts Center); Maryellen Eltgroth (local photographer & artist); and Sheri Smith (Little Landers Historical Society).

Village Poets of Sunland-Tujunga and the Sunland-Tujunga Poetry and Literature Committee were grateful for the support of the following organizations and individuals that made this event possible. Special thanks for hosting the Passing of the Laurels 2024 to the McGroarty Arts Center, former home of California Poet Laureate, John Steven McGroarty (1862-1944).

 
  

The Donors and Financial Supporters included: State Senator Anthony Portantino; Councilwoman Monica Rodriguez; Moonrise Press & Dr. Maja Trochimczyk; Helena Modjeska Art & Culture Club in Los Angeles; Aldore Collier; Sybil DeCenzo; Tony McEwing; The Back Door Bakery & Café; C & M Printing; and Village Poets of Sunland Tujunga – Joe DeCenzo, Elsa S. Frausto, Marlene Hitt, Alice Pero & Pam Shea 

The Volunteers consisted of:  Evelyn Serrano (photographer) , Michael Olivarez  (photographer), Martin Prado  (Creation of the laurel crown), Maja Trochimczyk (program design, reception and décor),  and Pablo Patricio Paredes Caretaker, McGroarty Arts Center

More books by Poets Laureate - Joe DeCenzo, Marlene Hitt

Beautiful bouquet courtesy of Kathleen Travers. 
Tablecloths and decor by Modjeska Club and Moonrise Press. 

Event announcement in La Crescenta Weekly.

Maja Trochimczyk, Marlene Hitt and Ambika Talwar, 2024.




Maja Trochimczyk with Joe DeCenzo, 2010

MAJA TROCHIMCZYK - The 6th POET LAUREATE, 2010-2012

This blog was created to document my activities as the Poet Laureate, so there is no need to repeat this information as it was posted earlier - each event had a post: 

During my two-year term as Poet Laureate, there were many more poetry events and posts that documented them, but I picked the most popular posts from this blog. "Christmas with Ivy" has been the most popular to date, with over 8000 readers, followed by "California without Messiaen" post with 4300 readers. The second anthology I published in my term was described on my Moonrise Press blog, and the Chopin with Cherries events on the blog dedicated to this anthology and, later, also to all things Polish and Polish American.

For the Passing of the Laurels ceremony in 2010 I came up with a motto for my term "Poetry ... in pursuit of happiness..." and wrote a new poem, "What I love in Sunland" - which after 14 years still rings true. Illustrated with some of my photos of leaves, flowers, and landscapes, the flyer was distributed during my public appearances during my term, that included the publication of two poetry anthologies (Chopin with Cherries and Meditations on Divine Names) as well as the creation of monthly Village Poets readings at Bolton Hall Museum. I also wrote a poetry column for the now defunct Voice of the Village community paper, organized multiple music and poetry events, read poems at art exhibits and neighborhood council events and yes, was very happy as a Poet Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga, my longest and most cherished title...  






WHAT I LOVE IN SUNLAND

(C) 2010 by Maja Trochimczyk

1.
The strong arms of the mountains
embracing, protecting our town

2.
The lights scattered in the night valley
during my drive to the safety of home

3.
How clouds sit on the hilltops
squishing them with their fat bottoms

4. 
The river playing hide-and-go-seek under the bridge
to nowhere: “now you see me – now you don’t”

5. 
The towering white glory of yucca flowers in June –
we are Lilliputians in the giants’ country

6. 
The mockingbird’s melodies floating above
red-roofed houses asleep on little sunny streets

7.
Armenian fruit tarts sweeter than fresh grapefruit 
and pomegranate from my trees

8. 
Hot, shimmering air, scented with sage and star jasmine,
carved by the hummingbird’s wings

9.
The rainbow of roses, always blooming
in my secret garden 




Photos by Maja Trochimczyk (events, nature), and Joe DeCenzo (event).