The impact of receiving funding on my creative practice
An update about a 2018 Local Artist’s Bursary
Poetry is a slow business, at least it is for me. In 2018 I was awarded a local artist’s bursary of £2000 from Ginkgo Projects/Bloor Homes to write poems in response to the landscape in and around Amesbury. I wrote a little about the bursary and my research for the poems here:
In this post I talk about my first steps in planning and beginning to write the poems.
Here I wrote about making a poem on a bus ride to Avebury Stones.
Here I wrote about the influence of wildflowers and circles on my Wiltshire poems.
I wrote about six news poems in the weeks after I received my funding, using the money to keep me afloat, so that I didn’t need to worry about finding paid work over the summer. I also used some of the bursary to fund writer-in-school training with the National Literacy Trust, which was very helpful. I wrote about that here.
There was no pressure to report back to the bursary funders, although I did send regular updates, and no strict dates to to adhere to, or rules about the number of poems I wrote or what I had to do with them. If anyone was measuring my productivity, I think they would have been underwhelmed by my creative output! Nevertheless, the bursary has most definitely enhanced my practice even though it’s taken a while for me to get there. I don’t think I would have written these particular poems at all if I hadn’t been given this small pot of money, since I hadn’t written about place before, or closely observed landscapes or researched the heritage of any area. However, once I began researching and planning for these poems, I became more and more interested in writing about all of these things, particularly in the context of climate change. The money gifted me time and nudged me in a particular direction without imposing restrictive rules.
The poems from this project have all been redrafted, expanded, changed completely, abandoned and returned to, and rewritten as different poems in the past few years. Recently, some of them have come into the light. In 2020, ‘Sheep at Avebury Stones’ was longlisted in The Rialto Nature and Place Competition, judged by Pascale Petit. In summer 2022, ‘Last Chance, Strawberries’ which is about driving past Stonehenge on the A303 (currently under threat because of a government-approved road tunnel project to which there is much opposition) was published in Raceme magazine. Most recently, my poem ‘Visiting Woodhenge and the Church of St Mary and St Melor, Amesbury’ was shortlisted in the 2022 Live Canon International Poetry Competition, performed by the Live Canon Ensemble and published in the competition anthology. You can also see a film of Nichole Bird from the Live Canon Ensemble reading my poem at the anthology launch – my poem starts at 53.45.
Other poems from this series are currently out for consideration in different places and I hope that most of them will be included in my next full collection or pamphlet, when that is eventually published. I’m glad to be able to document here how much the bursary meant to me and how it has helped my creative practice.
Here are a couple of pictures I took of St Mary and St Melor Church in Amesbury, and of Woodhenge, when I visited in the summer of 2018. There are more images at my blog www.josephinecorcoran.org where this post was originally published. I am in the process of moving my blog from WordPress so your patience is appreciated. Thanks for reading!
My Live Canon poem opens with the lines
“It is the story of a woman / whose understanding travels dreamlike / between two places. One scorching day / she adds her fingerprints / to a stone-and-timber neolithic circle / to an early church. / Time, a dandelion clock…”