Support Your Local Poet
I am moved and honored to be named Indiana Poet
Laureate. This is the right time for me to make a contribution to
the life of poetry in our state. I wish that my Indiana-loving
parents were still alive to savor the unexpected honor.
Since my family and I moved to Indianapolis in
2004, after 34 years in the New York area, many good things have
happened to me and my writing: a collaboration with photographer
Darryl Jones that became the Invisible Presence coffee-table
book from IU Press; a collaboration with IU jazz pianist-composer
Monika Herzig that led to the CD Imagine – Indiana in Music and
Words from Acme Records; the recent publication by the Indiana Historical Society
Pr. of my prose memoir, The Ripest Moments: A Southern Indiana
Childhood; and the fall release by IU Press of Bloodroot:
Indiana Poems, a selection of 175 poems written 1971-2007. All
these projects have deepened my contact with the landscape and the
people that figure in so many of my poems.
I knew it was going to be good to be living
back in Indiana, but I had no idea it would be this good! For a
poet so passionate about exploring his Indiana German origins and
searching for home, being named Indiana Poet Laureate is a
tremendous affirmation. I hope to make my energies and enthusiasms
contagious! As Indiana Poet Laureate, I plan to continue my efforts
to reunite poetry and music through performances and a new series I
am creating for The American Cabaret Theatre in Indianapolis, Together Again: Music & Poetry; try to bring Indiana poetry to TV
and radio; give readings, talks, and jazz and poetry performances
with my collaborator Monika Herzig in libraries and other venues;
and visit schools to share with students my love of reading and
writing poetry and prose memoir.
When I was living on Long Island, I sometimes
wore a button I got at the Walt Whitman Birthplace in Huntington
Station. What that button says, above the working man’s image of
Walt Whitman as seen in the first edition of his Leaves of Grass,
is my motto now as I become Indiana Poet laureate: “Support Your
Local Poet!”
--Norbert Krapf
Indianapolis
June 17, 2008
INDIANA POET LAUREATE LINKS
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Poet Laureate Activity Photo Gallery
Part One: June 18 - September 26, 2008 |
Click on the thumbnails for
larger versions. |
June 18, 2008 concert, Ice-T recites
Langston Hughes’ Ask Your Mama poem sequence with the
Indy Symphony Orchestra and the Ron McCurdy Quartet |
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Norbert with Ice-T, after the
latter recited Langston Hughes’ poem sequence “Ask Your Mama”
with the Ron McCurdy Quartet and the Indianapolis Symphony
Orchestra. Norbert and Monika, along with Tasha Jones and Carl
Hines, performed jazz and poetry in the lobby before the show. |
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Monika and Norbert in the lobby
before 6/18/08 Ice-T event. |
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Carl Hines’
copy of Langston Hughes’ Ask
Your Mama. |
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Langston Hughes inscription for
Carl Hines. |
June 25 private reception at the
Indianapolis Museum of Art hosted by Jim Irsay, Colts owner, for
opening of Kerouac On the Road scroll manuscript exhibit.
The public opening was the next night and the David Amram jazz
backing for recitation of passages from the novel repeated. |
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With David Amram at opening of
Kerouac scroll exhibit, Indy Art Museum. |
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With bassist per excellence Frank
Smith |
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Kerouac looks down from above
where the On the Road scroll MS is on show. |
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Norbert recites “On Hearing
Shearing” with David on keys and Kenny Phelps on drums. |
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Norbert recites with Frank on
bass. |
July 12 reading from The Ripest Moments at Bookmamas, an independent bookstore at 9 Johnson Street,
Irvington, Indianapolis. |
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Bookmamas, in historic Irvington,
Indianapolis. |
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Norbert ready to read and sign. |
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Another great audience. |
July 16 evening recording of poems with
Cary Fields at WICR, Univ. of Indianapolis, for two “Fields
of Bluegrass” programs. |
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WICR, 88.7 FM, The Diamond, Univ. of Indianapolis. |
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Cary Allen Fields,
host of “Fields of Bluegrass,” at the controls. |
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Norbert prepares
to read his poems for programs on Women in Bluegrass and Working
Men & Women. |
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Cary smiles after
reuniting poetry and song. |
July 23 evening recording of poems at WICR
for “The Free Zone” with Cary Allen Fields and special guest
artist Greg Ziesemer. |
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Back at WICR, to record poems for
Cary Allen Fields’ “The Free Zone.” |
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Cary and special guest
singer-songwriter Greg Ziesemer, founder of The Spud Puppies.
Greg now performs and records with singer-songwriter Kriss
Luckett . |
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Norbert and Greg. Norbert recorded
his poems “Full Moon Over Central Indiana,” inspired by Kriss
Luckett’s “Sweet Sister Moon,” and “I’m Practically with the
Band,” a poem he wrote for The Spud Puppies. |
Poet Laureate Party, American Cabaret
Theatre, July 27, 2008
On Sunday, July 27 at 5:30 p.m. the American
Cabaret Theatre, top floor of The Athenaeum, 401 East Michigan
Street, Indianapolis, hosted a Poet Laureate Party, which was
open to the public and free of charge. Light
refreshments were provided by Jeanette Footman of Zamovar, which hosts
the weekly Sunday Kaffeeklatsch at Perk Up, 6536 Cornell Ave.,
Broad Ripple. Norbert Krapf and Monika Herzig and Friends (Carolyn Dutton on violin, Peter Kienle on bass) performed poetry and jazz from Imagine –
Indiana in Music and Words, Mark Kesling, ACT CEO, announced the details of a new series he invited the new Indiana Poet
Laureate to create, Together Again: Music & Poetry, and
everyone had a chance to mix, talk and celebrate.
The next 11 photos were taken by
John Groppe |
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Mark Kesling,
CEO of the American Cabaret Theatre, in the Indy Athenaeum, welcomes
everyone to the Indiana Poet Laureate party. |
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Sharon
Gamble, of WFYI’s “The Art of the Matter,” explains to the
audience that she is
filming to begin, with Norbert as IPL, a TV project, The Indiana
Poetry Corner. |
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First IPL,
Joyce Brinkman, passes on the poetry torch to Norbert as IPL 2. |
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Monika Herzig
(piano), Peter Kienle (baritone
guitar), and Carolyn Dutton (violin) provide the music. |
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Norbert
recites poetry. |
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We all four
go at it. |
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Monika
smiles. |
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Monika,
Carolyn, Norbert |
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We thank the
audience. |
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At the book and CD table. |
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Norbert signs
fellow St. Joseph’s College alum Tim Seiler’s books. |
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Norbert
visits with an audience member. |
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Jeanette
Footman of ZamoVar contributed peach crumb cake. |
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Poets Jeff Pearson,
JL Kato, and Richard Pflum. |
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Poet Joe Heithaus, his wife Jenny, and 3 of their 4 children. |
August 1 and 2 readings and signings as part of
the annual Jasper Strassenfest. |
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With my Aunts Lucy (91) and Rita (85), cousin Mary, and brother
Len after my reading at the St. Charles Health Campus, Jasper. |
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Aunt Rita
looks back through her copy of the memoir, which I’m about to
read from. |
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Annette Marks,
program director, gives the intro. |
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Left half of
the audience. |
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A resident
asks a question. |
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Café
setting, evening reading, Dubois County Museum. Cousin Tony Krapf and wife Elise are seated at
the far right. |
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Memoir cover theme table setting. |
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Reading from
the memoir at the DCM. |
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Standing in
front of photo portraits of Great-aunt & -Uncle Lizzie &
Alphonse Krapf |
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With cousin & h.s. classmate
Marlene Kunkel Bingham. |
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With Ruth
Newman, of the Newman sisters on the memoir back cover photo,
East 15th St. gang. |
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With
daughter of Brute Hoffman, hero of “The Night the Game Was
Called.” |
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With Sandy
Sternberg Miller, neighbor at whom the IPL once supposedly threw
stones but missed. |
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Dave
Kluemper & cousin Mike Schmitt, mainstay volunteers at the DCM |
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Brenda Hurm, Rosie Stewart,
and Stephen Jones behind the Indiana Poet Laureate cake. |
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Mayor Bill Schmitt arrives
at the DCM signing to read a proclamation. |
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The proclamation that Aug.
1, 2008 is Norbert Krapf Day, was not read until Aug. 2,
therefore spared the IPL all anxiety. |
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The mayor laughed when the
IPL read his poem “The Schneebrunzer,” in which the mayor offers
a reward for anyone who identifies the culprit. |
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With Carolyn Brames Taylor,
Len Krapf , Nancy Brelage Teder, and Barbara Tucker Hoffman. |
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With Dave Blessinger,
hay-hauling buddy |
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With cousin Annie Alles, who
has bought a dozen copies of The Ripest Moments.
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With Donna Schepers,
planning a visit to Jasper schools. |
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A hand-made
tray as gift from the DCM. |
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The IPL’s friends
keep him honest and humble by giving him a poet lariat plaque. |
August 25 reading from The Ripest Moments: A Southern Indiana Childhood at the Carnegie Art Center , Rensselaer , In. Aug. 26 lecture about writing a memoir to St. Joseph College
Core Humanities program freshman. All photos by John Groppe. |
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View from the back of the room at the
Carnegie Art Center , with mainly St. Joseph ’s College freshman in
attendance. While waiting for the reading to begin, the audience
listened to NK’s collaboration with pianist-composer Monika Herzig, Imagine – Indiana in Music and
Words. |
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NK seen from close-up while reading
from his memoir. |
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Delivering a lecture titled
“Harvesting Your Ripest Moments” to SJC freshman. |
Aug. 27 reading by “Airpoets” hosted by the
Indiana Writers’ Center at the Indy Art Center, Broad Ripple, to
celebrate the release of their Rivers, Rails, and Runways anthology. |
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The 5 “Airpoets”
(who had poems selected to become part of stained-glass panels at
the new Indy Airport) read from their new anthology, Rivers, Rails, and Runway at the Indy Art
Center (Writers’ Center): l.r., Joseph Heithaus, Jeannie Deeter
Smith, Norbert Krapf, Joyce Brinkman, Ruthelen Burns.
SF Bay Press and Amazon.com |
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Ruthelen Burns
reads. |
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Jeannie Deeter
Smith signs. |
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The IPL signs. |
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Joe signs. |
Sept. 3 introduction of German
poet/playwright Helmut Haberkamm for his talk “On Being a
Southern German Dialect Writer” in the Poetry on Brick Street
series, Zionsville. |
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German poet/playwright Helmut Haberkamm speaks with Rohana McCormack
after giving talk at the Brick Street Inn, Zionsville, about being a
dialect writer in southern Germany. NK introduced. |
Sept. 4 rehearsal and performance of “A
Call for Peace” with Monika Herzig and Tom Roznowski and the
Living Daylights in the Together Again: Music & Poetry series at
the American Cabaret Theatre. |
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Norbert, Monika, and Carolyn Dutton rehearse for the A Call for
Peace program at the American Cabaret Theatre, the opening of the
series Together Again: Music & Poetry. |
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Tom Roznowski rehearses the finale, John Lennon’s “Imagine.” |
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Helmut, who collaborates with a Franconian dialect
singer-songwriter, observes ACT rehearsal.
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Sept. 6 Penrod Arts Festival signing of The Ripest Moments at the Indianapolis Museum of Art. Not
shown are Sept. 20 signing at Keystone Mall Borders, Indy; Sept.
24 Poetry Out Loud presentation, Connersville High School; and
Sept. 26 reading for the Indiana Arts Commission board, Indy. |
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Norbert signs books at the Penrod Arts Festival, Indy Museum of Art. |
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