Monday to
Friday from 10am until 8pm at The Riverside Rooms, home of the Southbank
centres artists in residence. I have
been in this residency for a year now, it continues indefinitely.
On
Monday I met with Book Trust, Marian Keen Downs and Barrister Ivor
Frank to discuss The Letterbox Club and the future launch when The Letterbox Club
goes public after a two year pilot. On Tuesday I met at
Forward the publishers on Regent St in Piccadilly, it's roasting, with Alan Brownjohn (publisher) , Natalie Whittle
(financial Times) Freida Hughes (poet)
and Fleur Adcock (poet) to judge The Forward Competition. It was a pleasure to be there amongst them and through no fault but my own I
felt torturously inadequate. “We’ll have no Teflon poetry” threw
Freida Hughes. And that is as much as I can say cause the rest is confidential.
I left for the first interview on my new book Listener which I hope to god is never put forward for a Forward prize. I’m an hour late
for the interview with The London Magazine and while we sit outside The Riverside Rooms as the thames slides past a woman
faints onto the hard concrete of the south bank. We call
security, this takes up another hour.
We decide to possibly reschedule the interview. Wednesday is the birthday party for Becky Shaw, Jude kelly’s right hand woman. Thursday
is taken up with meetings and
administration.
But it’s
today Friday that's the highlight of my week. I visit Centrepoints shelter for the
young and homeless in Vauxhall. I am introduced to a few young talented artists in the
centre and I am moved by the stories I hear from people who have suffered as a result of their circumstances and through
no fault of their own. I have worked
with centrepoint before but this is about sitting and listening. And though I was only there for an hour and a half I am proud that they allowed me to view their work and I listened to some incredible individuals. I came away
inspired by them all, by their photographs and artworks and poems. “I do it because I love it” says a young
tall black man. “It’s like, I can’t not
do it – it makes me happy”.
These young
homeless people are living in the shadow of the south bank yet most of them
have never visited. How can I get
them to the south bank? How can I get them to meet other artists of their age?
How can I get them to contact and connect? How can I at least provide what may be a fleeting and what could be a lasting impression of contact with the arts industry.
I promise that I will introduce them and their artwork to The South Bank in some way. But definitely I want them all to come and see
the show by the artistic director of the entire complex. The show released over the next week is The Wizard of Oz. If I can’t get free
tickets I’ll pay for them myself, because amongst the whirlwinds and the storms
of their youthful lives there's no place. There’s no place Like Home… Theres no place like home…. .