Learn to write a poem in sonnet style, then create a collage to emphasize your poem's style & message which will be featured on Clark County Library's Community Sustainable Art Wall in 2025.
In this set of 2-hour writing & art workshops, participants will learn to compose different styles of poetry taught by Las Vegas author & poet Kevin Buckley. Once the poems are written, participants will create a mixed media collage about their poems which will be displayed March 1-April 30, 2025, on the Community Sustainable Art Wall at Clark County Library where visitors are "free to be inspired" in celebration of National Poetry Month.
Poetry & Art Workshop schedule:
Feb 15, 2025: sonnet
Free admission & open to the public. All materials will be provided. Seating is first come, first served and may be limited. For more information, please call 702.507.3458.
About Kevin Buckley: Kevin Buckley is an award-winning artist, author and designer from Las Vegas where his work has appeared on radio, in print, online and in gallery shows. His epistolary poem "Don't Flatter Yourself" was chosen for inclusion to the statewide poetry project "Nevadan To Nevadan: What I Need To Tell You" sponsored by Nevada Arts Council. Kevin taught five poetry styles (acrostic, epistolary, blackout, ekphrastic, diminishing) for Clark County Library January-March 2024 in which his collage art & poems were displayed on the Community Sustainable Art Wall along with his students' work in recognition of National Poetry Month during April 2024. He returns to teach four different poetry styles in this new set of workshops.
AGE GROUP: | Teens | Seniors | Adults |
EVENT TYPE: | Community Events | Books, Poetry & Writing | Arts, Crafts & Hobbies |
Mon, Jan 13 | 10:00AM to 8:00PM |
Tue, Jan 14 | 10:00AM to 8:00PM |
Wed, Jan 15 | 10:00AM to 8:00PM |
Thu, Jan 16 | 10:00AM to 8:00PM |
Fri, Jan 17 | 10:00AM to 6:00PM |
Sat, Jan 18 | 10:00AM to 6:00PM |
Sun, Jan 19 | 10:00AM to 6:00PM |
Originally opening in 1966 as a three-room library within the Airport Annex building, the Clark County Library moved in 1967 to a storefront. In 1971, the library moved again to its current location using deeded land from the County and with money awarded by the Max C. Fleishman Foundation. The building went on to have two remodels: one completed in 1986, and the second completed in 1994, which resulted in the three-story, 120,000-square-foot building it is today. This redesign notably included a 399-seat theater and an 80-seat black box theater/dance studio. The Library District also added the Best Buy Teen Tech Center, which provides a place for teens to explore and master new technologies and digital skills.