Blogoscope FaceBook YouTube Photo Album
                 
 
Links

by Geoffrey Gatza
Dedicated to Mrs. Lucas : my fourth grade arts teacher


The best actors in the world, either for tragedy,
comedy, history, pastoral, pastoral-comical,
historical-pastoral, tragical-historical, tragical-
comical-historical-pastoral, scene individable, or
poem unlimited:

LORD POLONIUS, The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark Act 2, Scene 2


I love Kenmore, NY. I was born and raised here, educated in the public schools and upon graduation left for the United States Marine Corps. I was looking for the adventure that this town actively seeks to avoid. When one goes out looking for danger it should be no surprise when you find it and I found danger in spades. It took me a long time to understand how great this community is. It is well run municipality that makes it hard to understand why other towns do not have the same operation in place. Well, no matter. I live here now and am very happy to be here.

It is easy in my mind to understand why I would make an epic poem series of this town. I have dreamed great dreams as walked up and down these streets. Memories immediately spring to mind, pulling me back to age 14, or 7 or whatever and that triggering moment is what is propelling me to write. And what makes one write is what one should write about.

There is a responsibility to this poem. This may be my poem but this is our village and I still have to live here. Poems and poets are dangerous and the prospect of public art opens the art to the most conservative of readers. My goal is to not upset anyone in any way and fully display the dynamo that is Kenmore. This is not paid for in public funds and there is no politics. My hopes is that should someone find this online or in a store, feel proud or something along those lines about their home. Should this fall far from that expectation, please accept my apology and know that it is my poor ability as poet to depict a beautiful place.

And don 't get me wrong, this place has troubles as any place will have troubles. That is life as only life can be! I left this peace to find war ….

This takes place in four volumes of works. This is not what I thought would happen when I started. I thought this would be an epic poem with memories and photos and whatnots of found items to capture the conscious of a community. Over years I gathered up materials and this slowly became untenable as one volume as a poem cannot contain all these items into one, but slowly these ideas fell into separate entities and so became several items. All books should be viewed as poems, or poetry or with a poetic eye.

The first volume is still developing as a longish novel in verse, or some such thing. It is based on the book of Enoch, the man who walked with god. This is an apocryphal apocalyptic text from the Old Testament of the Bible. This backbone of a story tells of how the angles fell from heaven when they fell in love with human women. They marries them and had children who were giants. God kills the children and buries the bones and sends all 200 devils into hell. Enoch gets to witness this from God's vantage point and so begins a narrative for an epic poem. How does this relate to Kenmore, well that is my burden and it will be great and relevant when complete! The second and third volumes are more artsy. Volume Two is a series of photopoems. If nothing else it is a nice picture book :-) The third is craft elements and anti computer. The fourth volume is a mirror image of the first volume. Set in one-word poems this is the ghost image of the first book, and the setting of private memories. These are not art and why subject anyone to that ick :-) A one word poem depends on two elements to work. In this case the title is the street title and it corresponds to a memory. There is also a mirror image to the first volume poem in the same space, so Tremaine Ave. Vol. One will has a direct connection to the Tremaine Ave. in Vol. Four.  

Also check out a series of links to the places on the internet to check out more about Kenmore. There are links to history, maps, architecture, Wikipedia and the local government page.

Enjoy!

News Media on Kenmore: Poem Unlimited

+ Article: The Return of the Native Son

+ Article: Kenmore Native Is A Poet And Entrepreneur

 

 






Kenmore: Poem Unlimited Vol. One

Poem Unlimited       (125 Pages)

A mythopoetic look at Kenmore, NY. Based on The Book of Enoch and the Welsh,
Mabinogi. Now complete and ready for reading. Enjoy!

[ Kenmore: Poem Unlimited ] 1MB

 

 

 

 






Kenmore: Poem Unlimited Vol. Two

Photos Unlimited       (260 Pages)

A photopoem book of Kenmore, NY. Five years of photos look at a wonderful village
through Springtime, the October storm and the destrustionand rebuilding of Jane
Addams Elementary school.

[ Kenmore: Photos Unlimited ] LARGE FILE ! 30MB

   






Kenmore: Poem Unlimited Vol. Three


Memories Unlimited     (75 pages)

In this volume Gatza takes handwritten memories, scraps, found objects to create
a moving experiment of scrapebook and hysterical diary. Taking the idea of non-computer
generated memoried in a one sitting purge of ideas, this moving portrait of a town through
touch. Scans from the originals.

[ Kenmore: Memories Unlimited ] LARGE FILE ! 150MB

View as online Web Gallery [ Recommended ] Click here to go to page!

 






Kenmore: Poem Unlimited Vol. Four

 

Ghost Book     (130 Pages)

 

Street Names as titles with one word poems. This evocative display of one word poems
takes the reader on a side street of what a poem should be and what a single word can
provoke and provide.

[ download here ] 500KB

 


Links to Kenmore

Welcome To The Village of Kenmore, NY Online http://www.vi.kenmore.ny.us/welcome.html
The official town website that has a lot more to it than one might think. Great resource to find out all about our town

Kenmore History
http://www.tonawanda.ny.us/history/kenmore_images.htm     |       http://www.vi.kenmore.ny.us/hist.html

Google Maps of Kenmore, NY http://maps.google.com/maps?q=Kenmore,+NY,+United+States+of+America&sa=X&oi=map&ct=title

Kenmore, New York - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenmore,_New_York

Kenmore News
Local news for Kenmore, NY continually updated from thousands of sources on the web. http://www.topix.com/city/kenmore-ny

Tudor Revival Architecture in Buffalo, NY http://www4.bfn.org/bah/a/archsty/tud/index.html


Geoffrey Gatza is the editor and Publisher of BlazeVOX [books] and the author of five books of poetry; Not So Fast Robespierre is now available from Menendez Publishing. He is a graduate of the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, NY (1993) and Daemen College, Amherst, NY (2002), and served as a U.S. Marine during the first gulf war. He lives in Kenmore, NY with his girlfriend and two cats.

http://www.geoffreygatza.com/              http://www.blazevox.org

 

Geoffrey Gatza is a young poet of the era of the so-called post-avant. Future historians of poetry will no doubt note how the post-avant is primarily characterized by the prolific number of literary Tupperware© parties its members hold in various locales around the country. At these parties, as is well known, transparent Tupperware© containers of various sizes and shapes are excitedly passed around, their slightly varied forms and sizes avidly appraised, their snap-on covers lovingly fondled, the names of the different owners of said containers uttered with breathless, “you-are-one-of-us” approbation. Historians will no doubt note, as well, that Geoffrey Gatza was never invited to these parties, and that his lack of popularity was, in the main, his own doing. For when he wasn't in the kitchen cooking (he is a chef by trade and a master one), he chose to spend his time alone someplace, designing, crafting, and forging a kind of strange (for lack of better description) rocket backpack, which in a field of poppies he one day strapped himself into and fired up with a click of his Zippo. Historians will note what a few on the ground amazingly observed (though not, of course, those “insiders” at the parties, blocked as they were by the soundproofed walls and roofs around them): A flaming dark form shooting up at tremendous speed, lifting higher and higher, getting smaller and smaller, and then, of a sudden, at a tremendous height, exploding in a giant, blinding flash, sending thousands of pieces of contrailed debris slowly spinning down out of the sky around a central, slowly falling ball of light… Oh, but no, don't be sad. For the historians will not mourn his fate. They will observe, rather, and quite matter-of-factly, that in the era under discussion, nearly all poets, whether of the School of Quietude or the post-avant, chose a safe, flat, and authorized path, while a tiny few, like Geoffrey Gatza, elected to gloriously immolate themselves far above the Gravity of Literature, and way beyond the slow, demeaning death of those who are satisfied, in their fleeting existences, to remain there.        —Kent Johnson

 

 

Photo of Geoff by Kenmore Historian Ed Adamczyk

©2008 BlazeVOX [books] | 14 Tremaine Ave. Kenmore, NY 14217 | editor@blazevox.org  


Archaeological Sites
Ashcombs Quarter
Chapline Place
Fairfield
Governor's Land
Jessups Plantation
Monticello
Montpelier
Mount Vernon
Poplar Forest
Seville Plantation
Stewart Castle
Stratford Hall
Utopia
Williamsburg
Ashcombs Quarter
Chapline Place
Fairfield Quarter
44JC298
Jessups I
Jessups II
Building l
Building o
Building r
Building s
Building t
Elizabeth Hemings Site
Site 7
Site 8
House 14
House 24
House 26
House 37
Montpelier Yard Contexts
House for Families
North Hill
Quarter
Seville House 15
Seville House 16
Stewart Castle Main House
Stewart Castle Village
44ST116
Utopia II
Utopia III
Utopia IV
Palace Lands Site
Richneck Quarter
Query the Database
Artifact Queries >
Artifact Distribution Queries >
Faunal Queries >
MCD Queries >
Context Queries >
Site Information Query
Query Bucket
AQ1: Basic Inventory
AQ2: Detailed Inventory
AQ3: Detailed Inventory for Individual Contexts >
AQ4: View All Artifact Attributes by Artifact Type
AQ5: Select Artifact Attributes by Artifact Type
AQ3a: Context
AQ3b: Feature Type
AQ3c: Feature Number
AQ3d: Unit Type
AQ3e: Stratigraphic Group
AQ3f: Phase
AQ3g: Feature Group Number
AQ3h: Quadrat ID
ADQ1: by Artifact Type
ADQ2: by Mean Ceramic-Date-Type
ADQ3: Select Attributes >
ADQ3a: Beads
ADQ3b: Buckles
ADQ3c: Buttons
ADQ3d: Ceramics
ADQ3e: Glass
ADQ3f: Tobacco Pipes
ADQ3g: Utensils
ADQ3h: All Other Artifacts
FQ1: Basic Inventory
FQ2: Detailed Inventory >
FQ2a: Context
FQ2b: Feature Type
FQ2c: Feature Number
FQ2d: Unit Type
FQ2e: Stratigraphic Group
FQ2f: Phase
MCDQ1: By Contexts, Feature Numbers, ...
MCDQ2: MCD-Type Frequencies
CQ1: Basic Inventory
CQ2: Detailed Information >
CQ3: Select Attributes
CQ2a: Feature Type
CQ2b: Deposit Type
CQ2c: Unit Type
CQ2d: Feature Number
About the Database
Interpreting Query Results
Citing Query Results
Mean-Ceramic-Date Types
DAACS Color Data
DAACS Stylistic Elements
DAACS Cataloging Manual
Database Structure
Project List
Glossary
Papers & Manuscripts
Bibliography
About DAACS
Research Context
Historical Issues
Project History
Credits
Monticello Archaeology
What's New
Contact Us