From SF Gate & San Francisco Chronicle:

Method Writing participants to reveal their works

Published 2:20 pm, Wednesday, June 25, 2014

With a bachelor’s degree and a master’s degree in creative writing, Alexandra Kostoulas has had many teachers and learned many approaches to writing, but of all the courses she’s taken, the one that helped her through the difficult teenage years has proved the most powerful.

“I met Jack Grapes when I was 17 at a poetry reading that I had to go to for extra credit because I was not getting a good grade in my English class, and I had to give proof that I went,” Kostoulas said recently at WeWork, a communal work space above the Golden Gate Theatre. “He signed this paper that said, ‘This is to prove Alexandra really did come to my reading.’ ” She’s still proving it.

Grapes, a Los Angeles poet, developed an approach to writing based on method acting, which focuses on finding a deep, authentic voice. Initially based out of his home, the method writing workshops became so popular that Grapes eventually had to get an office; participants have started a writers collective, and they’ve long been one of the main draws at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books.

Grapes has now been teaching method writing for more than 30 years. One of the first people to receive his blessing, Kostoulas has been running a San Francisco Method Writing workshop since 2012.

“He uses a concept called the deep voice, which is a way of connecting through what he calls the transformation line, to sort of the soul of who you are, or the deepest part of who you are in your writing,” she said. “I learned step by step how to massage that idea of the deep voice and generate fiercer, deeper work. He teaches you how to say all the things you hold back from saying, and all the things that you carry around with you.”

The workshops, which are designed to create a nurturing environment with a focus on doing real work on the craft, attract people from different generations and from all walks of life: Recent participants include a scientist, a tech worker, a dancer, a visual artist, a choreographer and a healer.

“The one requirement,” Kostoulas says, “is that people are willing to go deep and tell the story they’ve always wanted to tell.”

Many of the people who take the class repeat it, and a community has begun to emerge here, too. Kostoulas, who was by more than a decade the youngest in her first class, remembers her experience: “They all were doing this really compelling work and striving to rip their hearts open on the page, and say the truth about who they are, and I found that to be profound and I really enjoyed it.

“Someone asked me yesterday, who was working on a scene: ‘Is it always like this: Do you always go to render your work and then you feel frustrated and then you get through it?’ And I said, ‘Yeah, that’s what I do every day.’ That’s the process. But part of it is knowing what the process is, and focusing on process over product.”

Offered three times a year, the workshops span eight weeks of weekly meetings and conclude with a group reading at the Emerald Tablet. (The fall session will begin enrolling soon; cost is $395. For more information, go to www.methodwritingsf.com.) This Sunday’s event, called “Write From the Gut,” will feature work of all kinds by more than 20 writers, each reading for three minutes or less, with an intermission and refreshments.
http://www.sfgate.com/entertainment/article/Method-Writing-participants-to-reveal-their-works-5579459.php

 

From The SF Bay Guardian

Spread your wings

CAREERS + ED ISSUE: Six courses to expand your artistic horizons

 |

METHOD WRITING

Be the Brando of poets, as Alexandra Kostoulas — student of famed Method Writing sage Jack Grapes — “strips away the artifice of writing, the baggage that keeps us from the most essential building block of any writing: the Deep Voice.” The class is based on journal entries which are transformed using Method Writing techniques into stories and poems. Help your writing to leap from the page and roar with fire! Or at least try something passionate and different.

April 29-June 17, Tuesdays, 6:30-9:30pm, $395. Emerald Tablet, 80 Fresno, SF. Also April 30-June 18, Wednesdays, 6:30-9:30, $395. Wework Building, 25 Taylor, SF. www.methodwritingsf.com

http://www.sfbg.com/2014/04/08/spread-your-wings-six-courses-expand-your-artistic-horizons

From Poets and Writers Magazine

The Classiest Bunch: Chiwan Choi’s Evening with the Creative Writing Club at RCC

Read more from Readings & Workshops Blog

A blog from: The Staff of Poets & Writers

Posted by RW Blogger on 11.22.13

P&W-sponsored writer Chiwan Choi is the author of Abductions and The Flood, among other works, and the founder of Writ Large Press. In October, he performed at Riverside Community College in Riverside, California. We asked him to blog about his visit.

I’ve been fortunate to read my work at great venues in numerous places over the years, from Los Angeles to New York. I was able to meet wonderful and inspiring people like Caitlin Myer and herPortuguese Artists Colony in San Francisco, the amazing and selfless Mike Geffner and his Inspired Word events all over New York, and everybody whom I’ve ever met in Seattle.

But I have to say, the two places that have been my favorites so far have been two city colleges that are overshadowed by their more famous UC counterparts. One was the writing class at Berkeley City College that used to be taught by a fantastic young writer and teacher named Alexandra Kostoulas. The other, my absolute favorite, is Riverside City College and a group that calls itself The Stay Classy Creative Writing Club, a student club at RCC, with Jo Scott-Coe, one of the best essayists writing today, as advisor. The group has invited me out three times now, most recently on October 2 of this year.

http://www.pw.org/content/the_classiest_bunch_chiwan_choi_s_evening_with_the_creative_writing_club_at_rcc

Our Write from the Gut events have also been covered in the The Rumpus’ Notable San Francisco section

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