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Looking for a Kiss at LUmkA

First writer off the rank, Jeffrey Wengrofsky, announced that he too was considering leaving the city before proceeding with the poem “I Wanna Move to New York,” conjuring a cleaner, cheaper, eucalyptus-cleansed city that will never be. Cynthia Ross (formerly of the all-girl punk band The ‘B’ Girls) invoked dead lovers and alternate selves that might want to fuck or stay home to clean the house. Poet and novelist Ben Fama reminded us of life’s simple rules, case in point: “don’t become the spectacle today.”

 

The Whitney Review's Whitney Mallett rose to the spectacle reading about menstrual blood on sheets, a perfect counterpart to a discombobulating painting of blood-glossed tiles on a nearby wall by exhibiting artist Lucy Tarquinio. Cabut himself transported us to a Camden of the ‘80s through the gaze of an amphetamine-fueled protagonist, operating on a logic of “amaranthine time” and “howling infinities,” capturing a future ghostliness of which we're all constituted.

 

Photos from the night below. 

Anna Pederson, Tess Manhattan
Ben Fama
Cortney Connolly, Tuesday Carson
Lydia Sviatoslavsky, Cortney Connolly, Richard Cabut, Lucy Tarquinio
DUMP HIM
Cynthia Ross
Reuben Dendinger
Lucy Tarquinio
Richard Cabut
Whitney Malllett
Richard Cabut
Cynthia Ross, Richard Cabut
Tuesday Carson
Veronica

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