John Ashbery

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Wilde Boys October 09
“Wilde Boys is a queer poetry salon for beautiful boys who write and appreciate beautiful poems”, as its creator Alex Dimitrov puts it. The salon brings together established and emerging queer poets in New York City.

Organized and run by Dimitrov, a 2009 Sarah Lawrence graduate who now works at the Academy of American Poets, the salon meets monthly in Manhattan and Brooklyn at the apartments of various salon members, and frequently at poet Tom Healy’s West Village apartment. The first meeting was held there this past May and began with a reading and discussion of the poems of James Merrill.

“I wanted to create a smart and sexy gathering of queer poets where aesthetic, formal, and political issues pertaining to contemporary poetry could be discussed without pretension,” says Dimitrov. “I was, of course, inspired by the original French salons of the 17th and 18th century, and I also wanted to adopt Oscar Wilde as our patron saint.”

John Ashbery

For the next 13 weeks we’ll count down the most important names in culture, 13 men who broke new ground, brought down barriers and redefined sexual identity — artists and thinkers who continue to shape the culture around us. Who will be the next James Baldwin, Francis Bacon, or Yves San Laurent? Who are today’s preeminent cultural masters — legends in their own time — men whose influence will resonate long after they’re gone? Here’s our list. And it’s gay.

#13 – JOHN ASHBERY (Poet) 81

In September of 1963 author Kenneth Koch said: “I believe John Ashbery is one of the best poets now alive.” 45 years later, the same can be said. Certainly one of the most decorated poets of our time he is the winner of the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, the National Book Critics Circle Award and most recently the 2008 International Griffin Poetry Prize. Influenced by other homo-neurotic favorites — W.H. Auden (gay), Jasper Johns (gay), Gertrude Stein (gay) — his work has often been labeled “controversial” or “avant-garde” and “difficult,” while his name is mentioned along side Whitman, Pound, Auden, and Eliot. Not bad for a guy who partied with Andy Warhol.