Brittany Billmeyer-Finn is a queer poet and playwright
living in Northampton, MA where she is an aspiring social worker in the Smith
College MSW program. Her full length book, the meshes, written through the
filmography of Maya Deren is out from Black Radish Books. In 2015 she directed
her first play, the meshes: an interaction in 2 acts at SAFEhouse Arts in SF.
Her collection Slabs is available from Oakland based small press Timeless
Infinite Light. Slabs is a collection of poetry dealing in and out of the body
through various sites; home, memory, books and ritual. She continues to
investigate a queer poetics and the influences of magic on various blogs.
1
- How did your first book or chapbook change your life? How does your most
recent work compare to your previous? How does it feel different?
My first book, the meshes came out with Black Radish Books in 2015. It was a project I stayed
with for about 4 years. I was very dedicated to this project. It made me
uncomfortable in some ways. It intrigued me. I was motivated to investigate
Maya Deren’s work and her autobiography which became a practice of looking
inward. I was moved by her filmography and I appreciated the poetics of her
short films, the bodies relationship to time and location, the way she never
seemed to complete a project everything always unfinished and always with a
lingering possibility …this unfinishedness spoke to something about my own
developing poetics. I was also critical of Deren’s work. When writing through
and about her documentary film, The Divine Horsemen the Living Gods of Haiti shot from 1947-1954, the unfinished film
focused on Haitian Voudon ritual particularly dance and possession, I
questioned Deren’s motivation and my own to see this project through and
wondered about her inability to complete it and if she had this question too?
There was a lot of projection happening. Anyway, this is to question and
consider the dangers and stakes of alliance and intention, the colonial gaze
and ways in which to push up against the passivity of spectatorship. This work required
as all work should, a constant intention of looking inward and examining my own
positionality as an artist- this work of constant self-reflection also extends
beyond the text and into my relationships, politics and alliances.
The book became then about iteration and transformation.
That each section of the book informed the next and transformed itself as it
moved into new contexts, became embodied and performable. This is true of the
organization of the text, which is written in four parts moving from poetry, to
essay, to a play to a sort of polyvocal score named the “annotated
bibliography.”
Significantly, I think it was only possible for this text
to evolve the way it did because of the amount of time and the various life
contexts I was in and out of while I was writing it. I wrote it while living in
Oakland, while in grad school, while
having a queer awakening, meeting my dearest friends, my most inspiring
collaborators, while falling in love, after grad school, while working as a
shopgirl, moving into a new apartment, teaching creative writing to high
schoolers, co-creating an interdisciplinary pedagogy for a queer camp for young
folks and throughout various life things, mundane day to day things and the
trajectory of the book changed as my life did as I became more open, more at
home.
I guess to actually answer your question, “How did your
first book change your life?” I might say that it didn’t change my life all by
itself but it was connected to the present moment. It is an object I was able
to bring to life, literally in directing an adaptation of the play section of
the book, the meshes: an iteration in 2
acts, but also I wasn’t writing this book in a vacuum. It was so influenced
by my friends and collaborators who embodied the text on stage and on the page,
who populated my life and influenced my artistic practice as well as my state
of being.
While I wrote the
meshes I also wrote another manuscript, Slabs.
Slabs
was published in December 2016 by small press Timeless Infinite Light as a part
of its Tracts series. This book is very different from the meshes. I wrote it while traveling to Northampton, MA a few
years ago (little did I know just a few years later I would live there and be
going to school for social work) to visit a dear friend and poet, Rebecca Maillet. I was taking a break from the
meshes, which is a much more project based and conceptually minded piece.
In Slabs, I just
wrote about myself in relation to my surroundings, my relationships, I wrote
about my queerness, about my mother and best friends from MI, I wrote about
being in love, about accountability, I wrote about magic and ritual about
feeling awkward. It is like I peeled myself out of the meshes and looked all around me and felt my body. So in some
way it is connected to the process of writing the meshes, it is what the
meshes is not, the subject is me and it is grounded in my own language and
experience. It is just the thing it is, which is sort of plain, sincere,
tender, nostalgic, located in significant sites of my life, among significant
people and with a bit of magic.
2
- How did you come to poetry first, as opposed to, say, fiction or non-fiction?
I’m not sure I did come to poetry first but it is the
thing that stuck. I started writing as an awkward preteen. I wrote a series of
short stories about a group of teens experimenting with sex, drugs and opinions
in an abandoned tree house. It was so cliché but so much a part of
understanding what writing can do for the developing self. I came to poetry in
high school and took every class with Chris Tysh at Wayne State University in
undergrad. It was in her classes that I was offered the many possibilities of
poetry, the interdisciplinary possibilities, the performativity of it, the practice
and the process of it, the intuitive, improvisational, the ways in which poetry
is simultaneous in its nothingness and somethingness.
3
- How long does it take to start any particular writing project? Does your
writing initially come quickly, or is it a slow process? Do first drafts appear
looking close to their final shape, or does your work come out of copious
notes?
My process is pretty inconsistent depending on what is
going on in my life. With the meshes
I spent periods of time fixating and obsessing and creating new forms and
experimenting with the text, oscillating between writing myself into the work
and keeping myself out of it.
Slabs
wasn’t as rigorous, I sort of needed it, a sort of grounding touchstone. I
wrote it in a week’s time. Tinkering with it here and there until it found a
home with Timeless Infinite Light.
The last couple years, I find myself sitting in bed (bed
is where I do most of my writing) surrounded by a pile of books of different
subjects and a deck of tarot. I read and interpret tarot cards. I’ve been
really fixated on this little book of saints lately…and I write my
interpretation and encounter with these various texts until I have enough
gobbily gook on the page to investigate what is there.
4
- Where does a poem usually begin for you? Are you an author of short pieces
that end up combining into a larger project, or are you working on a
"book" from the very beginning?
Like I said, gobbily gook.
5
- Are public readings part of or counter to your creative process? Are you the
sort of writer who enjoys doing readings?
Iteration is a significant part of my poetics that came
out of the meshes project. I am excited to see how many different things I can
make with the same material. With the
meshes after writing the first 2 sections, “the poems” and “the essay,” I
started adding voices to my readings, giving out parts to my friends to add
layers to the text, to embody it somehow, this evolution is what inspired
writing “the play.” the meshes: an iteration
in 2 acts may not have happened without the opportunity to share the work
at various readings, in new spaces.
I recently had my book release for Slabs in New York City and I realized as I stood up in front of the
room that I was rusty, my voice shaky, I lost my breath a couple of times but Slabs is a tender text and so my
vulnerability then was also true to the work and that felt ok. The response of
my body as I stood in front of the room, allowing myself to be present in that
then was soothing in a way.
I consider readings to be an opportunity to present the
text in a new way, to utilize the space, to consider the site as part of the
text itself, to embody it is significant to my practice.
and
I feel like my
feelings of readings can be summed up from a page in “part one” of Slabs: to be invited into these rooms/to
turn my back to these rooms/wanting to run out of theses rooms/to charm these
rooms/to empathize with these rooms/to dig a hole for these rooms (18).
6
- Do you have any theoretical concerns behind your writing?
What kinds of questions are you trying to answer with your
work? What do you even think the current questions are?
What can poetry do?
What is lost in poetry?
What are my alliances?
What is my socio cultural position and how does it
influence my view, how does this influence my artistic practice and
manifestation?
What are the political and personal stakes?
Is authenticity a social construct?
Who is erased? What is being left out?
What is a queer poetics?
What are the ethics of this?
What is the role of community, how is it connective, how
does it fail?
What are the value systems present, what do they push up against?
Are they complicit?
7
– What do you see the current role of the writer being in larger culture? Does
s/he, they even have one? What do you think the role of the writer should be?
To me this is a question about the relationship between
the personal and the political, which I think are inextricable, the same way I
believe poetry can never be apolitical. There is also something about community
here, an archive, a context, a moment in time. I’ve already expressed the
significance of collaboration in my writing process. I guess writers have an
opportunity to create a story, writer’s voices in relationship that offers
various significant realities and interpretations of their life and time. It’s
not to say that writers are sacred. I think I said something about poetry being
simultaneously something and nothing. I think a writer’s role is also definable
by their intersectional experience, this map of oppressions and privileges that
speaks to the individual experience and historical implications of the
contemporary moment. This intersectional view then becomes a poignant location,
I mean context yes, and self-awareness, which is a significant role for myself,
and accountability, opening oneself to critique, to response and not closing
the door to the labor of calling out/in. I think if the writer is doing
political work, then it cannot stop at the page. I also think the role of the
writer varies depending on the privilege of the person writing. I read a post
on Facebook by a writer that said, as a white person it is not my job to write
about racism but white supremacy.
As an aspiring social worker who is currently interning in
the field, I also find writing to play a therapeutic role with clients, being
heard, telling a story that is one’s own and the possibility for agency and
validation in that moment can be powerful. So a writer’s role then is not
homogenous, it varies, it is the intersection between the personal and the
political and it cannot stand alone on the page though the act of visioning and
imagining a different political and social configuration is part of the work.
8
- Do you find the process of working with an outside editor difficult or
essential (or both)?
“Working with” is essential, I suppose differentiating
collaborators and editors is something symbolic of the relationship of institutions
and community this sort of both/and moment. I really appreciate the experiences
and supports of the small presses I’ve worked with, this way of needing each
other and supporting each other as part of the work.
After graduating from Mills College MFA program in 2012, some
friends and I began our own little workshop where we shared, interpreted and
offered feedback to one another. We wanted a non-institutional space in which
to engage with one another’s work.
In the final stages of the
meshes, my friend and poet, Cosmo Spinosa offered his editing skills and we
would meet at Mills College and sit on the lawn and read the meshes out loud and make edits as we went through while eating
grilled cheese and smoking cigarettes.
My dear friend, writer, book and performance artist Kate Robinson has been in process of interpreting the meshes into an artist book series, another iteration of the
text. She also designed the cover of the
meshes and so every time I look at it I think of her.
Working with Black Radish Books to edit the incredibly
dense text of the meshes felt
supportive and exciting as the book was becoming an object.
So many times I felt lost in the process and so many times
I had collaborators and editors to be an anchor.
In directing the play, meshes:
an iteration in 2 acts, Portland based artist and musician Stella Peach
created a score, interpreting the text into music, what an amazing moment to
hear the translation of the work into sound.
Timeless Infinite Light, who makes beautiful books, turned
Slabs into this magical object. It’s
like a little spell, a talisman and I get to share the pages with Phyllis Ma an
amazing visual artist and I get to be a part of the Timeless archive which
brings new and exciting meaning to this little collection of work that feels so
bound up inside my body. It is healing to have it become something by the hands
of talented people who have vision and intention. It offers so much more to the
experience of making something. I guess my preferred mode of writing is both
the solitariness of it and then the ways in which it transforms by the hands of
others.
9
- What is the best piece of advice you've heard (not necessarily given to you
directly)?
In the early iterations of the meshes, in a grad school workshop my instructor asked, “What
are your alliances?” This is a question I ask as I write, always.
From Dean Spade’s Normal Life, “engaging in constant reflection and self-evaluation. And it is about
practice and process rather than a point of arrival, resisting hierarchies of
truth and reality and instead naming and refusing state violence.”
And this from a conversation with the brilliant Tessa
Micaela, “Because being
silent is a privileged position, one of the ways privilege shows up is the
ability to be silent without repercussion. Being silent means that we remove
ourselves from the process of working through the ways in which we
unconsciously exercise our privilege every day.”
10
- How easy has it been for you to move between genres (poetry to plays)? What
do you see as the appeal?
I think I have sort of named this idea of iteration as
part of my poetics. With the meshes
it was a process of allowing myself to show up in the text. But I didn’t want
to be there alone. It was also an opportunity to create a sort of ritual out of
the process of writing the poems and essay. This ritualizing then became the
place where the questions could show up and reveal themselves.
11
- What kind of writing routine do you tend to keep, or do you even have one?
How does a typical day (for you) begin?
Right now I am writing so much. It is not always this way.
I just moved across the country with my partner and dog, I started a new
master’s program and am doing new work. I am a beginner again. It has been a
difficult process and because of the complexity of all the moving parts and
figuring out how to be a person, poet, social worker, partner, friend and
activist in a new setting, under a new regime, writing has been one way to
allow the feelings to arise, to allow myself to feel the thing rising in my
throat. My instinct is to push it down into my gut, but that’s not working
anymore in any area of my life and so I write it, which is only one step in a much
larger process of relationship building, showing up and being present.
12
- When your writing gets stalled, where do you turn or return for (for lack of
a better word) inspiration?
Usually my tarot deck
13
- What fragrance reminds you of home?
It sort of depends on which home? One of my best friends
since high school, (from MI, where I grew up), you know cosmic soul friends (a
phrase I have stolen from another dear friend) has always had a particular
smell and so every time I smell some combination of lilacs and patchouli I
think of her, which is the same as thinking of home.
The smell of the top of my dog, Patsy’s head reminds me of
the little apartment my partner and I shared in Oakland. It was this weird
carpeted octagonal apartment and it was our first place together and I miss it
all the time.
This particular musty smell of old books reminds me of the
apartment I shared with Kate Robinson and Cheena Marie Lo in Oakland that we
named the Tender Oracle. The front steps had this particular smell, so while
walking up the stairs of the tender (for short), I would be transported to a
used bookstore in Detroit that I used to frequent creating a thread between
Detroit and Oakland. Now, that particular mustiness transports me from
Northampton to Oakland, walking up those front steps of that little home we
made together where we hosted a reading series, Manifest for three years. I’m
so grateful for this time and the intentionality of the space we created
together.
14
- David W. McFadden once said that books come from books, but are there any
other forms that influence your work, whether nature, music, science or visual
art?
Any kind of encounter whether it be with an object, a
person, a piece of art or music, bearing witness to something, eaves dropping on
a conversation, old trauma playing out in the present moment all has the
possibility of becoming poetry.
15
- What other writers or writings are important for your work, or simply your
life outside of your work?
I have been doing an interview series for Drunken Boat called “Blessed Be” where I interview predominately queer writers, makers, performers
about their work, their perception of a queer poetics and their relationship to
magic. Having the opportunity to talk to and learn from writers like Cheena Marie Lo, Tessa Micaela, Zoe Tuck, Mai Doan, Coda Wei, Arisa White, Fisayo Adeyeye, Moss Angel Witchmonstr, Stella Peach, Marcus Lund, Zach Ozma and
Mariama Lockington has been an incredible experience and I’m excited to
continue with this project.
16
- What would you like to do that you haven't yet done?
Thinking in terms of iterations of work, I would love to
create an installation inspired by Slabs.
What is a Slab? What is its visual configuration of tenderness, sincerity,
memory, queerness? For some reason I picture a lot of sequins and yarn.
17
- If you could pick any other occupation to attempt, what would it be? Or,
alternately, what do you think you would have ended up doing had you not been a
writer?
I am not just a writer. I have been a shopgirl for a long
time and now I am working on my Masters of Social Work at Smith College. So I
guess I envision myself as a therapist, as someone working in human services.
18
- What made you write, as opposed to doing something else?
I’m not sure, it was just always the thing, way back I was
collaborating with my friends in grade school. We were making books out of
construction paper. A childhood friend I have known since like age 8, makes fun
of me because I was so bossy about it (I’m an only child) I would insist that
she draw the pictures and I write the story. I have since become a better
collaborator and that is in fact my favorite way to generate work and
foundational to my practice.
19
- What was the last great book you read? What was the last great film?
I just finished reading Krupskaya’s latest releases, The Braid by Lauren Levin and Snail Poems by Eric Sneathen, these two
people and books are so moving and books I will return to time and time again.
I am also very much anticipating MG Roberts new book, Anemal, Uter Meck coming out from Black Radish Books and Mariama Lockington’s chapbook, The Lucky Daughter
from Damaged Goods Press.
I have been sick recently with the flu, so I have been in
bed cuddling my chihuahua, drinking tea and watching The Book of Conrad, The Punk Singer and Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975.
20
- What are you currently working on?
I just finished a manuscript about myth, work, friendship
and Oakland. Now am working on a collection, currently titled, “Sessions” that
is very wrapped up in my present self and circumstances of change and
transition, a bit from this work that kind of sums up the present moment from
which I write is this: this feeling of ok, I can do this/ the
place where I am most injured/so capable of traumatizing each other/what’s
yours & what’s mine?/should you be able to heal me?/I’m all confused/I sort
of believe in everything/I mean to say my co-dependence, I mean to say
simultaneity & loss/the places where it becomes about control/this is how
the energy works/I don’t even get it/what the fuck is taking care?/this pulse
in there/that resonates with me/if only I could feel it in my body /when did I
unlearn this? /I can feel the pulse of that/to get in deeply/that frozen need
No comments:
Post a Comment