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Juxtaposition: An alignment of two works that inhabit the same theme, but express that theme in different ways. Curators pair visual art with written work to create a hybrid experience, calling our community to approach art and word in a non-traditional way.


Maker: A painter, sculptor, chef, fashion designer, painter-sculptor, graffiter. These are artists, but not in your easel-pallet type. Anything that is made can be art, and makers are pushing the boundaries to make everything from a restaurant to clothes an opportunity to experience creative brilliance.

Illustration: A visual reaction. Illustrations are more traditional forms of visual work and include posters and the visual components of juxtapositions. Illustrations pull you out of the world you imagine when reading a poem or a story and call you to rethink that image and subsequently the written work itself.

Poster: Illustrations created by the Cavalier team that are paired with poems and short stories. Posters are made specifically in response to a written work, rather than being paired after completion of both works, as is the case with juxtapositions.

Inhalation: Read a poem, see a painting, take it in, and breathe out new life. Inhalations are products inspired by previous works. After all, we are in the business of “exchanging imagination for imagination.”

Reaction: A piece of work, written or visual, that was created in response to a poem, story, or visual work of art. Reactions create a bridge between the written and the visual, thereby stimulating a composite understanding of the work we produce. Reactions reverse the unjustified detachment between art and word.  

Starting point: The genesis that inspires works to come. Starting points come in all forms and produce reactions of every medium. A starting point for a painter might be a poem, while a starting point for a poet might be a painting. A cycle might even erupt--we won’t stop it.




"It would have been simpler to begin at the beginning, but the beginning didn't mean much without what came after, and what came after didn't mean much without the end." - The End of the Story by Lydia Davis

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