Audacity Featured Artist Rex McGregor
Synkroniciti is thrilled to welcome back playwright Rex McGregor of New Zealand. Known for the zany wit of his pieces in Birds and Space, McGregor turns toward drama in Audacity. …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to welcome back playwright Rex McGregor of New Zealand. Known for the zany wit of his pieces in Birds and Space, McGregor turns toward drama in Audacity. …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to welcome back poet Lori Howe of Wyoming with a stunning cadralor. A cadralor is a poem comprised of five seemingly unrelated stanzas based on sensory, particularly …
Synkroniciti is excited to welcome back poet Ken W, Farrell, based in Texas, with two witty poems centered on contrasting forms of audacity. “Stand‑up Comic Girlfriend” unfolds as a comedy …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to welcome Polish visual artist Beata Króliczak-Zajko with three stunning macroformat portrait prints, measuring 150 cm (just under 5 ft) square, from her TRACES series. TRACES consists of two …
Synkroniciti is excited to welcome back writer and poet Rachael Ikins from New York with “How Do You Know,” a memoir piece in palm-of -hand style (single page, distilled memory) …
Synkroniciti is excited to announce our “Family” poetry contest winner, northern California poet and writer Annette Boushey Holland. “Picking Blackberries” reminds us that all beings (not only humans) are attracted …
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome poet Miriam Manglani, based in Massachusetts. “House Plant” laments the former intimacy between two lovers symbolized by a potted plant left behind, “its branches spilling …
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome back Philadelphia-based poet Alison Hicks with two contrasting poems. “Hill Reservoir” is an atmospheric piece set in nature, as the speaker goes for a winter …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to welcome Los Angeles writer Jeffrey Bryant with “THEY WOULD DESTROY A GALAXY FOR ME,” a luminous, twinkling poem about stars and the intuitive and constant presence …
Intimacy between people requires closeness as well as distance. It is like dancing. Sometimes we are very close, touching each other or holding each other; sometimes we move away from …
