In tandem with the release of
dreaming in the abandoned sculptor’s studio by
Gabrielle Octavia Rucker, published by
Sojourners for Justice Press, this intergenerational workshop invites children and their guardians to write, imagine, and build together. Grounded in Rucker’s poetry about Black childhood, sculpture, and mythmaking inspired by the work of Augusta Savage, we’ll explore poetry as a material practice, shaping language like clay and listening for what it wants to become.
Through gentle, generative prompts, participants will create poetic figurines, voice interior worlds, and reimagine childhood as a space of relation and revolution. Together, we’ll ask: What does it mean to stand in solidarity with children—not as symbols of the future, but as people living now? What forms can a poem take when we let it shape itself—guided by breath, body, and play?
This program is co-organized with
Sojourners for Justice Press (SJP), an abolitionist feminist micro-press behind the Black Zine Fair in New York City. Founded by
Mariame Kaba and co-directed with
Neta Bomani, SJP publishes short-form print—zines, pamphlets, chapbooks, broadsides, and other DIY publications—by people working within the margins of independent publishing.
Photo: Kedrick Walker