Poem & Short Story Published in Boom + Toolbox

During the pandemic lockdown, I participated in two workshops that saved my sanity and offered a sense of literary community. The Mexican Cultural Institute of Washington, DC hosted a creative writing workshop based on the work of the Latin-American Boom and other authors. Boom + Toolbox was instructed by Luis Felipe Lomelí and Carlos José Pérez Sámano.

What I loved about the workshops was reading poems and stories, and dissecting how they worked. We read authors that include Gabriel García Márquez, Amparo Dávila, Jorge Luis Borges, and Laura Esquivel. We were given license to experiment and take risks. I was able to get outside of my head during that crazy challenging lonely time.

What started as a six-session workshop, went on about twice as long, because we all enjoyed the community and the discussions. As a result, we also got to come back for a new session, Boom + Toolbox II. I am so grateful to the Mexican Cultural Institute and to both Luis and Carlos. I did a lot of writing during those sessions, and our work was collected into two anthologies.

Virtual Poetry Writing Workshop – Sunday, 8/1

Taking Off the Mask: Creating Poems to Celebrate Ourselves

Join me for a free and fun workshop hosted by Bloombars (Washington, DC)

Date: Sunday, August 1, 2021
Time: 3:00 PM – 4:30 PM EST
Cost: Free
Register: To register, please email Gowri at gowri@bloombars.com. Registration is required.

In this interactive poetry writing workshop, we will create poems that fully celebrate our identities, cultures, talents, and gifts. We will engage in guided writing exercises, using works of poetry and visual art as writing prompts.
Open to writers of all ages and all levels.
This event is supported, in part, by Poets & Writers.

Social Justice Writing Workshop

Class Begins June 21


Dates: Mondays, June 21 – July 26 (no class on July 5). Five class session
6:00 PM – 7:30 PM EST
Cost: $125
Register here

The past year has seen our entire world change, from the COVID-19 pandemic, to the global protests against racial violence and police brutality, to mass shootings, more racially-motivated violence, and on and on. Writers should be at the forefront, creating positive change for their communities.

As writers, we practice world-building as part of our craft. This workshop will focus on writing the world you want to live in. Participants will focus on a social issue about which they passionate, and will develop a writing project that they will develop over the course of the workshop.

The workshop is open to writers of all skill levels, ages 18+.

Virtual Writing Workshop on March 27

I am excited to be participating in the upcoming Women’s History Month Virtual Festival with this free writing workshop! Hope to see you there.

Virtual Writing Hour: Madame CJ Walker and Alice Dunbar Nelson
Date: Saturday, March 27th 2021
Time: 3- 4pm EST
Cost: Free
Register here.

Join us for a virtual creative writing hour. We’ve set up a space where writers can create, connect and draw inspiration from portraits of Madam CJ Walker and Alice Dunbar Nelson. The Portrait Gallery will provide the writing prompts. Please bring a writing utensil and paper or have your computer or tablet at hand!

The festival will also have story time, drawing classes, lectures and activities for art lovers of all ages to celebrate Women’s History Month. It’s all free. You just have register. Reserve your spot!

Writing My Resilience

Date: Friday, December 11, 2020
Time: 8:00 PM – 9:00 PM EST
Cost: Free

Join us for a special virtual, creative writing hour at the National Portrait Gallery in partnership with the Smithsonian’s “24 Hours in a Time of Change” campaign! We’ve set up a virtual space where writers can create, connect, and draw inspiration from stories of resilience from the Portrait Gallery’s collection. Bring your own beverage of choice and write with us. We will provide writing prompts, and you are also welcome to bring your own writing project-in-progress. We will write for about 30 minutes and end the session with a brief discussion or reading.

Dolores Huerta
Huerta Speaking to a Group of Women (1972), by Unidentified Photographer, Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery

Upcoming Fall Writing Workshops

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Let’s Talk About It: Understanding Race and Culture Through Portraiture and Writing
Wednesday, September 30, 5:00 PM – 6:30 PM EDT
Cost: Free
Register here

Please join the National Portrait Gallery and DC-based writer Willona Sloan as we engage in creative writing exercises designed to encourage meaningful dialogue around topics that include race and cultural identity. Through guided looking of works of portraiture from the collection of the Portrait Gallery we will write to celebrate and affirm diverse perspectives and identities with the goal of fostering community across cultures. This program is intended for writers of all levels who are 18+.

Virtual Teacher Workshop | Portraits Inspiring Student Writing about Current Events
Session I – Strike a Prose for Teachers
Wednesday, September 16, 2020 3:30 — 5:00pm EST
Cost: Free
Register here
Learn teaching strategies while generating new writing of your own in this creative writing workshop. We will use portraits of social justice activists from the Portrait Gallery’s collection as the inspiration for creative writing that explores current political issues, including the ongoing protests for police reform and racial equity. The workshop will include guided nonfiction and poetry writing exercises.

Virtual Teacher Workshop | Session II – Portraits, Pens & Protests
Wednesday, September 23, 2020 3:30 — 5:00pm EST
Cost: Free
Register here
In this workshop, we will share strategies for using portraits to inspire creative writing about current political events. The workshop will include interactive discussion and mini-writing exercises, designed to help you implement these strategies in your classroom. The workshop will build on Session I but may also be taken as an independent workshop.

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Virtual Writing Hour
Tuesdays, 5:00 – 6:00 PM EST
Cost: Free
Register here
I host a weekly, free virtual writing happy hour on Tuesdays. Please join us whenever you can. We look at one work of art that inspires the writing prompt. You can also work on your own writing during the time.  It’s just a fun way to gather in a collective creative space.

 

Virtual Workshops: Poems & Zines

Here are two new workshops that I will be hosting online in May and June. Check them out!

DIY Zine Making Workshop

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Date: Saturday, 10:30 AM – 12:00 PM (dates available in May and June)
Cost: $25
To register, please email me.

During this interactive workshop, you will learn the steps to take to create, publish, and distribute your own zine. Think of this as a crash course in DIY zine-making! We will develop your zine’s mission statement, and do brainstorming exercises and activities that will help you plan the content for your zine.

Bring plenty of paper and a pen, markers, scissors, and glue (if available). You will be asked to bring three images that represent something important to you. We will start to create your zine during the workshop and work on designing your layout.

We will discuss how to develop strong personal essays that express your ideas and perspective. We will talk about best practices for conducting interviews with bands, artists, and activists, and practice developing interview questions that lead to great stories.

Words Have Power: Poetry Writing Workshop

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Date: Wednesday, May 13, 7:00 PM – 9:00 PM EST or Wednesday, June 10, 7:00 PM – 9:00 PM
Cost: $25
Register here

Join us for a celebration of the power of social action poetry! We will draw inspiration from reading and discussion of poems by women of color who have used their words to fight for social justice, and create a poem of our own.

During this workshop, you will practice experimenting with voice, rhythm, and poetic form to develop a poem that communicates a social message, connects with readers, and tells a compelling story. You will also learn how to create a mini-zine to showcase your poem.

Class readings may include works by Joy Harjo, the current United States Poet Laureate; Suheir Hammad; June Jordan; Adrienne Rich; or Natalie Diaz, and participants will be provided with a suggested reading list for additional study.

 

Virtual Creative Writing Happy Hour

Load up your cheese plate and join me for a virtual, creative writing hour at the National Portrait Gallery!

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Virtual Writing Happy Hour

Bring your own happy hour beverage of choice and write with us at the Virtual Writing Hour at the National Portrait Gallery. Our goal is to create a virtual space where writers can create, connect, and draw inspiration from the Portrait Gallery’s online exhibitions. We will provide writing prompts, and you are also welcome to bring your own writing project-in-progress. We will write for about 30 minutes and end each session with a brief discussion or reading.

The happy hours will be held on Tuesdays at 5:00 PM, beginning on Tuesday, April 21.  Choose the date you wish to join us. Register here.

Creative Writing Prompt Newsletter

I hope you are well. I am planning to start a weekly newsletter with creative writing prompts for adults and children for the next couple of months, with the goal of inspiring creative writing, reducing anxiety, and providing a little joy! It will also help me to alleviate some of my own anxiousness.

If you want in, please send me your email address at creativegeniusdc@gmail.com or you can send me a DM. If you are already on my mailing list, please email me to let me know that you would like to receive this newsletter.

Take care,
-W

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Strike A Prose Adult Series – Postponed

Who Am I and Who Are We? (creative nonfiction)
This is workshop has been postponed. New date TBD.

What does it mean to be “American” in 2020? In this creative nonfiction workshop, you will draw inspiration from Outwin 2019: American Portraiture Today, which features 50 artists responding to the current political and social context in the U.S. and Puerto Rico. We will employ techniques from fiction and nonfiction writing to explore issues of identity, self-representation, and connectedness, as we tackle exhibition themes such as immigration, race, sexuality, violence, community, and family.


Strike A Prose: Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery
This is workshop has been postponed. New date TBD.

In this creative writing workshop, you will develop flash fiction inspired by the short videos in Outwin 2019: American Portraiture Today, which features 50 artists responding to the current political and social context in the U.S. and Puerto Rico. We will watch and discuss videos featured in the exhibition, and practice writing characters, setting, conflict, and action for flash fiction stories that grab readers’ attention.

Strike A Prose: Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery
This is workshop has been postponed. New date TBD.

In this poetry writing workshop, you will draw inspiration from Outwin 2019: American Portraiture Today, which features 50 artists responding to the current political and social context in the U.S. and Puerto Rico. We will discuss how to use works of art to inspire your writing; how to experiment with voice, rhythm, and form; and how to develop poems that communicate a social message, connect with readers, and tell a compelling story.

video: Hugo Crosthwaite, A Portrait of Berenice Sarmiento Chávez