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Dozens of Wick Award Winners to Return for 40th Anniversary

Wick Poetry Center will host a three-day gala celebration in September

More than 40 poets who have won acclaim from ѿappUniversity’s Wick Poetry Center are expected to return to the Kent Campus in September to celebrate the center’s 40th anniversary.

David Hassler
David Hassler

The group of poets has won either the Ohio Chapbook Prize, sponsored by the ѿappUniversity Press and the Wick Center, or the Stan and Tom Wick Poetry Prize.

“This anniversary will be a celebration of the power of poetry and will be a great reunion for the ever-expanding Wick family of poets,” said David Hassler, the Bob and Walt Wick Executive Director of the center.

“What’s exciting is we now have 40 former Wick authors coming back, so we’ll have author readings at the beginning of the first night," he told ѿappToday.

Maggie Anderson, first director of the Wick Poetry Center.
Maggie Anderson

The celebration, Sept. 19-21, will be packed with panel discussions, workshops and poetry readings, culminating in a gala dinner on Sept. 21.

Among those returning will be poet Maggie Anderson, founding director of the Wick program, which has provided a platform for global creative voices in its 40 years.  

“Our 40th celebration will be a testament to the ongoing mission of the Wick Poetry Center to encourage new voices and to bring poetry to the most urgent and evolving needs of our communities through readings, workshops, panels, interactive exhibits and digital platforms,” Hassler said. “It will also be a joyous homecoming for so many of our past Wick authors, scholarship winners, student interns, community members and the Wick family.”  

As a special feature, no one will be denied entry to the celebration due to inability to pay.

Registration for the three-day event is offered on a pay-what-you-can scale, allowing attendees to contribute according to their means. The standard registration fee is $125 for access to all events and receptions. At registration, there also is an option for those who can afford it, to make an extra donation to “pay it forward,” to help cover the costs of those who cannot pay the full price.

“For four decades, the Wick Poetry Center has been dedicated to fostering a welcoming community through free and accessible readings and events,” Hassler said. “Having people be able to take part is our top priority, and we've taken special measures to ensure everyone can join in our anniversary celebration.” 

All-Star Lineup

The event will focus on the themes of Poetry and Healing, Poetry and Science, Poetry and Peace and Poetry and Social Justice, and will feature a star-studded lineup of poets including:  

: Irish Poet and theologian, Ó Tuama’s work centers around themes of language, power, conflict and religion. He is the host of On Being’s “Poetry Unbound” and the author of “Poetry Unbound: 50 Poems to Open Your Life.” “Feed the Beast” is his most recent collection with “Kitchen Hymns,” a volume of original poems, and an essayed poetry anthology, “Poetry Unbound: Poems on Being with Each Other,” expected to be released this year. From 2014-2019, Ó Tauma was the leader of the Corrymeela Community, Ireland’s oldest peace and reconciliation community.  

Based in San Antonio, Texas, Nye is a poet and children’s author and was the Poetry Foundation's Young People's Poet Laureate from 2019-2022. She is the recipient of numerous honors and awards including the Ivan Sandrof Award for Lifetime Achievement from the National Book Critics Circle, the Lavan Award, the Paterson Poetry Prize, the Carity Randall Prize, the Isabella Gardner Poetry Award, the Lee Bennett Hopkins Poetry award, the Robert Creeley Prize, and many Pushcart Prizes. From 2010 to 2015, she served as a chancellor of the Academy of American Poets. In 2018, she was awarded the Lon Tinkle Award for Lifetime Achievement from the Texas Institute of Letters.

 

May Prentice House/Wick Poetry Center
The home of the Wick Poetry Center will be formally renamed the Gaston-Prentice House on Aug. 28, 2024.

Award-winning poet, essayist and translator, Hirshfield is the author of 10 collections of poetry, and two collections of essays, and has edited and co-translated four books collecting the work of world poets from the past. In 2017, with the March for Science in Washington, she founded Poets for Science, an interactive exhibit of science poems and writing invitations housed at the Wick Poetry Center, which has traveled to venues nationwide.  

Based in Chicago, Matejka is editor of Poetry magazine. A graduate of Indiana University Bloomington and the master of fine arts program at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Matejka served as poet laureate of Indiana in 2018-19. He is the author of “The Devil’s Garden,” which won the New York/New England Award and “Mixology,” a winner of the 2008 National Poetry Series. His third collection, “The Big Smoke,” was awarded the 2014 Anisfield-Wolf Book Award and was a finalist for the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award, the National Book Award, and the Pulitzer Prize in poetry. His most recent collection of poems, “Somebody Else Sold the World” was a finalist for the University of North Texas 2022 Rilke Prize and the 2022 Indiana Authors Award. His first graphic novel “Last on His Feet: Jack Johnson and the Battle of the Century” was published in February 2023.  

All four will give readings and host panel discussions, while Wick staff will guide attendees through writing workshops and immersive tours of interactive exhibits centered around the four themes.

Among the Friday events, Hassler said, Ó Tuama will interview Matejka, for a segment of his “Poetry Unbound,” podcast, giving the anniversary an international media platform.  

“The 40th anniversary will truly be a celebration,” Hassler said.  

WICK HISTORY

Brothers Bob and Walt Wick first established scholarships in 1984 to support undergraduate poets at the university. Bob was a sculptor and former art department faculty member at Kent State, and the scholarships were born out of a desire to honor and memorialize Bob’s son Stan (1962-1980) and Walt’s son Tom (1956-1973), both of whom died as teenagers on the same day, seven years apart.

Entry to the Maj Ragain Poetry Park
Maj Ragain Poetry Park at the Wick Poetry Center.

Over the next 20 years, the scholarships expanded into the Wick Poetry Program, which steadily increased its presence on the Kent Campus and involvement within the community. In 2004, the Wick Poetry Program was officially named the Wick Poetry Center, and in 2009, its popular Traveling Stanzas debuted as a collaboration between the center and ѿappvisual communication design students.

In 2014, the Wick Poetry Center renovated a residence that once belonged to May H. Prentice, the first female faculty member of Kent State. In this new location, the center also created the Maj Ragain Poetry Park, a peaceful space in the heart of the Lefton Esplanade, featuring the Edwin S. Gould Amphitheatre, “Seated Earth” bronze sculpture by Bob Wick, and the Joan and Ron Burbick Outdoor Gallery. On Aug. 28, the house will be renamed the Gaston-Prentice House to reflect the enduring legacy of Prentice and the generosity of former ѿappProvost Paul Gaston and his wife Eileen. 

LASTING LEGACY OF GENEROSITY

Although the Wick brothers have both passed away, the Wick family continues to support the center. A recent gift of $1 million brings the family’s total lifetime commitment to ѿappto more than $3.5 million.  

Bob Wick
Bob Wick

Chris Wick, son of Walt, pledged the donation in November 2023, acting as a representative for his family. The gift created an endowed position for the executive director of the center to maintain the kind of visionary, innovative leadership that has led to the center’s elevated national profile and highly regarded status and will memorialize the brothers’ tremendous efforts to bring the power of poetry to the larger community.

Over the years, Hassler said the Wick brothers and their family members have repeatedly told him that the joy they have received from watching the center grow and expand has far exceeded the amount of money they have donated for it and has given meaning to the untimely deaths of their sons. “They felt the value of what they received back in the spirit of the program is far greater than any dollar amount they ever gave to Kent State,” he said.

Chris Wick (left) and David Hassler (right) stand in front of the Wick Poetry Center’s Poets for Science exhibition at the Association of Writers & Writing Programs’ 2023 Conference and Bookfair.
Chris Wick, left, with David Hassler

“Thanks to the original vision and generosity of Bob and Walt Wick, and now Chris Wick, our center will continue to grow, transforming the lives of students and community members, locally and nationally, welcoming all into the ever-expanding Wick family of poets,” Hassler said. “I am most proud of how, through the passion, skill and dedication of our staff and student interns, the center continues to innovate new ways to bring poetry to everyday lives.”

POSTED: Monday, August 19, 2024 03:46 PM
Updated: Monday, September 16, 2024 11:07 AM
WRITTEN BY:
Lisa Abraham