The CLRR Slow Reading Programme #1

Fresh Milk is excited to share with you our first activation to inaugurate our Slow Reading Programme, an initiative dedicated to “building intimacy with our books while shaping a community of readers locally and across our archipelago.”

In memory of writer and art historian Colleen Lewis — whose collection of publications dedicated to Caribbean literature, history and contemporary art form the foundation of the Fresh Milk reading room — this programme invites you to form a bridge that cuts through the noise of our current media landscape in order to engage deeply with the Caribbean literary landscape.  

Programme #1 – Reflecting on the Lucayan Archipelago Residency

From September to November of 2024, Poinciana Paper Press became home to the first participants of the Lucayan Archipelago Residency in The Bahamas, with the support of the Panta Rhea Foundation.

Barbadian writer Ark Ramsay joined forces with book artist Joko Viruet Feliciano from Puerto Rico to create a collaborative work that develops a critical cultural dialogue with the Bahamian ecosystems and resources.

Un Santo a la Vez/A Prayer in Motion” is the result of this inter-island encounter, materialised in a carefully hand-bound book conceptualised and crafted by Joko which houses Ark’s written reflections, and masterfully put together under the guidance of Sonia Farmer, founder of PPP.

To bring the nuances and depth of this work into view, Fresh Milk invited established Trinidadian poet, arts reporter and book blogger Shivanee Ramlochan to connect with Ark in an organically meandering conversation of like-hearted souls. We have the privilege of sharing the recording of this exchange with a public audience, inviting you to join in the thoughtful contemplation of the pressing issues that our region collectively confronts.

Joko joins in the reflective process asynchronously, sharing audio recordings and images that guide us through the residency experience from her perspective.

See the full programme here

Announcing the Lucayan Archipelago Residency

Fresh Milk in partnership with Poinciana Paper Press and supported by the Panta Rhea Foundation are delighted to announce an 8-week Lucayan Archipelago Residency which will take place in The Bahamas between September and November 2024.

In response to the critical need for exchange across creative and environmental ecosystems, this residency brings together a writer and a visual artist from the Caribbean to imagine and co-create a critical cultural dialogue with the environment and resources in The Bahamas through the crafts of book arts. Our two residents are Ark Ramsay (Barbados) and Jocmarys Viruet Feliciano (Puerto Rico).

 

Ark Ramsay (Bridgetown, 1994), is a non-binary writer based in Barbados. Their work has appeared in or is forthcoming from The A-Line: Journal of Progressive Thought, Small Axe, Gertrude Press, Meridian, Adda, The Rumpus, Passages North, and The Gulf Coast. They have been a finalist for the Inaugural Story Foundation Prize through Story Magazine, an honorable mention in Ninth Letter’s 2021 Literary Award for Nonfiction, and shortlisted for the 2024 Commonwealth Short Story Award. They have received an MFA from The Ohio State University.

 

Puerto Rican-based Jocmarys Viruet Feliciano, a visual artist from Puerto Rico focuses on hand papermaking and book arts. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Fine Arts from the University of Puerto Rico, Mayagüez Campus and a master’s degree from the University of Iowa, Center of the Book. Jocmarys worked as an intern at the Morgan Conservatory in Cleveland, Ohio and has been an assistant at the Rare Book School at the University of Virginia. Her first experience with handmade paper was in 2014 as an exchange student in South Korea. Jocmarys has taught several bookbinding and handmade paper workshops in Puerto Rico and in the United States. Her artist’s books are part of special collections such as University of Miami, University of Iowa, Yale University, University of Pennsylvania and Stanford University. 

 

Together, Ark and Joko while based in Nassau will explore some of the family islands of this 700-coral island archipelago, meet with contemporary visual artists and writers, ecologists, and environmentalists to understand the ecological reality of the Lucayan Archipelago that sits within the Atlatnic Ocean. We can hardly wait to see what emerges from this collaboration!


 

About Fresh Milk:

Fresh Milk is an artist-led, non-profit organisation founded in 2011 and based in Barbados. It is a platform which supports excellence in the visual arts through residencies and programmes that provide Caribbean artists with opportunities for development, fostering a thriving art community. Fresh Milk offers professional support to artists from the Caribbean and further afield and seeks to stimulate critical thinking in contemporary visual art. Its goal is to nurture artists, raise regional awareness about contemporary arts and provide Caribbean artists with opportunities for growth, excellence and success.


About Poinciana Paper Press:

Located in the capital of the archipelagic nation of The Bahamas, Poinciana Paper Press provides opportunities to engage with books and their allied crafts to empower people to share their narratives in a region that has historically erased, marginalized, and exploited the culture and lived experiences of its inhabitants.

Bahamian writer and artist Sonia Farmer created Poinciana Paper Press as an independent book publisher in 2010, releasing handmade limited-edition chapbooks and artists’ books of Caribbean poetry, short stories, and experimental writing. Her vision is to advance the diversity of narratives and publishing modalities in The Caribbean.

In 2022, she established Poinciana Paper Press as the first Center for Writing, Book Arts & Publishing in The Bahamas—arguably, in the wider Caribbean—to expand this vision, developing visibility in the literary and book arts from within the Caribbean cultural ecosystem.

A major collaborator in the literary and visual arts communities in the region, Poinciana Paper Press facilitates programming aligned with its mission by providing opportunities to engage with the form of the book and its allied crafts of writing, bookbinding, letterpress printing, handmade paper, printmaking, book design, and calligraphy. This includes workshops, community outreach and engagement, exhibitions, publications, and residencies.


About Panta Rhea Foundation:

Mission: To catalyze a just and sustainable world through food sovereignty, community power building, and grassroots liberation around the globe.

The Panta Rhea Foundation (PRF) was established in 2001 as a private foundation devoted to researching issues and analyzing the operations, goals and potential of organizations committed to building a more just and sustainable world. The Foundation advises individual donors and other charitable entities on grantmaking strategies and specific grants.

We believe that lasting, authentic change must come from the grassroots; from the organized efforts of people and organizations to enliven the social imagination and envision a better future, to experiment with new ideas, and to hold elected leaders and corporations accountable to the communities they serve.

Our foundation name, Panta Rhea, is inspired by Ancient Greek philosopher Heraclitus. It roughly translates to “You never step into the same river twice” or “All things change, all things flow”—suggesting both inherent constancy and change as a fundamental of life itself. 

Fresh Milk’s 2019 in Review

Thank you for your continued support of Fresh Milk!

At the Fresh Milk Art Platform, we believe in the visual arts and its capacity to empower young artists and bring the Caribbean closer together. Through our local, regional and international programming, we have witnessed the benefit of investing in the arts, a sector that is increasingly vital now more than ever before.

With your valuable support, we will continue to contribute to the professional development of visual artists in Barbados, the Caribbean and its diaspora through our streamlined programming in 2020. While hosting fewer artists on site at Fresh Milk, this year’s residency focus will be on Caribbean Linked – a regional residency uniting artists from all linguistic territories in the region. We’ll also be fostering new international residency opportunities for Caribbean-based professionals.

A special focus for Barbados is the We Gatherin’ project and Fresh Milk is keen to participate to this unique event. If you’d like to work with us to commission new work by local artists for the 2020 Fresh Stops project or support new work for the Fresh Milk Art Board,
click that donate button!

It’s very easy to support us by making a donation through this PayPal link. Your contributions make our programmes possible, and gifts of any size are welcome.

The Fresh Milk Team offers warm thanks and deep gratitude,
and invites you to reflect on 2019 with us in our annual
year in review newsletter!

FRESH MILK XXII Photographs

Fresh Milk is pleased to share images from FRESH MILK XXII: Residency Readings, hosted on Friday, July 5th, 2019.

Writers-in-residence – inaugural recipient of the Colleen Lewis Research/Writing Residency, Barbadian artist Kia Redman; participant in our international residency programme, Bahamian writer Ethan Knowles; and the 2019 ‘My Time’ Local Resident, Barbadian writer Ark Ramsay – each shared the outcomes of their residencies, giving readings of their work and engaging with the audience about their experiences over the last few weeks.

All photos by Dondré Trotman.

Ark Ramsay’s Fresh Milk Residency – Week 4 Blog Post

Ark Ramsay shares a blog post about their fourth and final week as writer-in-residence at Fresh Milk.  With the official residency coming to an end, the question that is asked both internally and externally looms: what is the value of this experience? Ark thinks about the tangible and intangible responses to this question, recognising that residencies are in many ways immeasurable. They allow for the sowing of seeds that bear fruit in multiple, sometimes unforseeable ways over prolonged periods of time, and give creators the too-often denied permission to deeply and unapologetically invest in their practice. Read more below:

Photo by Dondré Trotman

I am terrible at goodbyes.

I preempt the pain of separation by inducing small shocks–inoculating myself against the final disruption–so that what arrives is already marrow-sucked.

I grow nostalgic for things that have not yet ended. It’s a feeling similar to déjà vu, in that I become a passenger in my body–aware of the artifice–trying to hold onto things–knowing them to be transient. I think, I will miss this; outcome being, I do miss this.

I have never walked on stilts, but my mind is well-trained at balancing conflicting mechanisms. It tight-ropes between trying to soften the now, and trying to seal it off in amber.

This was my last week here at Fresh Milk. I did not want it to be subsumed by my familiar patterns.

I slowed down at this farm.

I spent hours sitting amongst the quiet caucus of trees that I had no formal names for.

I contemplated, watched myself in my contemplation, and eventually (growing tired of the intruding me) learned to trust in silence again. There is a deep and penetrating silence (even with the lowing of cows, and the sometimes-intrusion of mahogany pods on a corrugated iron roof) which I had missed entirely while living in Shanghai. It is the kind of silence that May Sarton claims (writing in “Journal of a Solitude”), will force one to confront the starved face at the window–starved cat, starved person–simply put: in the silence are the questions you are running from.

I wanted so badly to push forward this week. To write ceaselessly. To unearth new. To shore up old. But there was a raggedness–the bucket of myself was overflowing with Bathsheba swampies–toppling each other in their quest to be rid of me. Uninspired, tired, I wrote. I wrote what was functional and necessary. I wrote because the ‘job’ of writing must persist even if the muses are late–or never arrive at all. Because you have to go through many roughnesses to reach the roughness that matters–the thousand words that delivers up one usable paragraph. Writing too carefully, I have learnt (am learning), feeds only the overbearing perfectionist–not the nascent manuscript.

And when that was done I retreated fully to silence. I stayed at the farm until the sun set, and the unresolved work of cows was put to bed. I stayed until the St. George noise had backgrounded to a hum, and even the mahogany pods were reticent to fall. I stayed until I could not even remember what it was like to sit in my apartment in Shanghai and hear the forever-din of city life. This resolved the raggedness.

Another form of quiet came to us this week in little Roo. A three-legged rescue puppy with a penchant for nuzzling into the softest parts of someone, and sleeping.

He took up the entire day–not in his need for me–but in my curative need for him. I was reminded of a Joy Williams quote, from one of her strange short stories, “Shepherd”: many things that human words have harmed are restored again by the silence of animals.

That ‘harm’ is always soiled up in our attempts to collate worth, value, the immediate return on investment of all things. For a writer this equates to: page count, characters built, scenarios polished, contacts made, submissions finalized.

What is the payout on a month in the bush?

Why should an organization be structured to support (what sometimes looks), like an artist’s retreat (read: vacation)?

What. Is. The. Value.

I can only recount my own process. What I, in my ruminations, consider to be returns.

What a residency does (I have found out), is provide this buffer against the anxiety of production. It cuts into the noise of ‘value’, and demands that one return to the font of all things–tend the garden–not force (an unforcible) germination process. I have a friend who talks about her work by saying: it’s still cooking. And I imagine a fragrant Caribbean one-pot, full of plantains, beans and everything else in the fridge–but it’s not ready. It needs time. The insights into my work, discovered here, may take two years to prove themselves useful. A story I began writing when I was nineteen needed the addition of the Bardo Thodol (Tibetan Book of the Dead) to reach full coherency–something I only came to see when I was listening to an audio version of that text at four a.m. in Shanghai. What is given now cannot always be used now. But all things are banked, and returned to.

Without time, nothing is given.

Without a buffer against the anxiety of production. The treadmill of value. Nothing valuable is made.

At the risk of overpowering this blog post with quotations, indulge me one last time:

Yet, how do you relax without the safety net of organizations and people who understand that the process of art runs contra to the process of production (as in product; as in consumer)?

What I want to do in these final days is be an active participant in the unfolding. I do not want to sorrow an ending that has not yet ended (though this is inevitable for me). I do not want to contest the value of a thing that I know to have imbued my work with indelible value. I want simply to be here. In the silence. In the nurturing.

The thing about this writing life that I am coming to understand, is that what it takes from you–it also rewards you with.

In time.

Thank you, and goodnight