Greg Jamie has Bachelor of Fine Arts from SUNY Purchase Film Conservatory. Greg held the solo exhibition Absent Myths: Watercolors by Greg Jamie at Border Patrol in Portland in 2019. Selected group exhibitions include the 2020 Bieniel at the CMCA in Rockland, The Missing Half-Second at Able Baker in Portland (2019), and Right Side Out- The Modern Self Portrait at Able Baker in Portland (2018).
Poets Categories: Performing Artist
id m theft able
id m theft able (born 1980 in Portland, Maine) is a composer and performer active within and without the realms of avant-improvisation, noise, sound poetry, sound art and performance art using extended
vocal techniques, found objects, homemade instruments, various electronics, and whatever else is he might happen to find useful in the moment.
He has given over a thousand performances across 4 continents in settings ranging from the filthiest of basements to the fanciest of festivals and has over 100 album releases (both solo and collaborative) to his name.
Tom Daley
Tom Daley is a poet and graphic artist who uses calligraphy, drawing, painting, and photography to illustrate poems. He is known in the Boston area for his calligraphic record of excerpts from poetry readings, which he posts online, often with musical accompaniment. His calligraphy has been shown at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston and at the Harris Center for Conservation Education, in Hancock, NH. His work can be found here.
Wesley Covey
Wesley Covey is the multi-instrumentalist frontman of experimental ambient collective The Ten Thousand Things (sacredmusick.bandcamp.com). When not bending his strings into soundscape narratives, Covey is a fingerpicking folksinger. His first solo acoustic album, The Serpent Eats His Tail, collects favorite covers, instrumentals and songs written over the past dozen years.
Matthew Ryan Shelton
Matthew Ryan Shelton is a poet, musician, and translator. His poetry and translations have appeared in English as well as Irish Gaelic, in such publications as The Cincinnati Review, Abridged, Poetry Proper, Asymptote, An Gael, Mantis, Causeway/Cabhsair, The Swarthmore Review, and Parhelion. His poem “Talus” was nominated for Best of the Net 2018. He is a student of Marcus Wise of Minneapolis, MN, tracing his lineage back to Ustad Dayam Ali Qadri of the Farrukhabad and Delhi schools of tabla. He lives in Philadelphia, PA.
Delaney McDonough
Delaney McDonough is a maker, producer, and arts administrator based in Brooklyn, NY. Delaney’s performed for Heidi Henderson (CT), Hana van der Kolk (NY), Asher Woodworth (ME), Annie Kloppenberg (ME), and collaborated with Hanna Satterlee (VT), Cookie Harrist (CA), Tommy Arsenault (VT), and Sara Gibbons (NY) among others. Presenters include Vermont Performance Lab (VT), Studio 303 (Montreal), Motion Pacific (CA), SALTA (CA), AUNTS (NY), Denmark Arts Center (ME), and Marlboro College (VT). During her time in Maine from 2013-2017, Delaney crafted dozens of performance events with collaborators ages 4-80 in schools, gyms, grange halls, docks, barns, and convenience stores. Currently, Delaney is company manager for Jody Oberfelder Projects and production manager for Lion’s Jaw Dance & Performance Festival (Cambridge, MA), Fresh Festival (San Fransisco, CA), and NOGO Arts (Brooklyn, NY)
Sara Gibbons
Sara Gibbons is a New York based artist. She has performed for Heidi Henderson, Annie Kloppenberg, Donell Oakley, and Kendra Portier. She also apprenticed and performed with David Dorfman Dance, and Assistant Choreographed on the Off-Broadway and Broadway productions of Paula Vogel’s Indecent. Sara’s work has been shown at Movement Research at Judson Church, the Center for Performance Research (CPR), the Brooklyn Art Exchange (BAX).
She also worked as a marketing intern at Center for Performance Research and makes work with her collaborator Doug LeCours as the performance duo TALL GIRLS DANCING.
Kathryn Butler
Kathryn Butler is a dancer and performance-maker based in NYC. A Colby College alum with a major in Theater and Dance and a minor in Physics, Kathryn has performed in work by Annie Kloppenberg at Danspace Project and with the Bill T. Jones / Arnie Zane Company in Portland, ME in Continuous Replay. Kathryn’s work has been presented at Colby and at other venues including Triskelion Arts, La MaMa ETC, Bates Dance Festival in their Young Choreographers Showcase, Virginia Science Festival, and Impulstanz in Vienna, Austria as part of the ATLAS program.
Suzanne Stone
Suzanne Stone is a visual artist, herbalist, master gardener, and beekeeper. She is well-known for her involvement as vocalist and saxophonist in the experimental ensemble Million Brazilians. Performing, recording and playing her solo work as White Gourd, Suzanne explores the depths of the tarot as metaphorical exploration in the form of music performances using a variety of found objects, gongs, 78 player, piano and audio cassette loops. Accompanied with a full visual installation, and often ritual costume, the presence of each performance has a completely different effect with the chosen card for the evening or tour. Suzanne has toured internationally as White Gourd and with Million Brazillians. Currently located in Belfast, more information can be found at her website: http://whitegourdsounds.blogspot.com/p/about.html.
Becca Shaw Glaser
Becca Shaw Glaser is a writer, artist, activist, performer, gardener, a lover of swimming and growing things. Her poetry and fiction has been published in Black Clock,The Offing, Columbia Journal, Lemon Hound, Rascal, H.O.W., Two Serious Ladies, Birdfeast, Vinyl, The Birds We Piled Loosely, Alimentum, Spoon River Poetry Review, The Laurel Review, Quaint, and New South, among other publications. She is the co-editor and author of the activist manual, “Mindful Occupation: Rising Up Without Burning Out.” Other nonfiction work appears with The Icarus Project, Mad in America, The Buzz, Off Our Backs, Entropy, xoJane, The Maine Commons, Luna Luna and The Rumpus. She was interviewed for her art, activism and writing on Ahttakes. She is a graduate of the CUNY Baccalaureate for Unique and Interdisciplinary Studies where she focused on historical and current political/personal trauma and healing, and theater, as well as Syracuse University’s Creative Writing MFA Program. She was a nonfiction editor at Salt Hill for several years, an editor of the Syracuse Peace Council’s newspaper, and illustrates and edits for various projects. She lives in Rockland.