Coming up on May 27, 2025, I’m excited to welcome the youth poets of the 2025 Voices for Change program to the stage at The Handsome Daughter to share their poem, FIGHT FOR HOME with the Winnipeg Poetry Slam community.
Back in the fall, I stepped into my role as facilitator for the 10th time (!) to work with high school students to create a poem which would be professionally filmed, then later launched online and performed live for an audience at the Legislature as part of International Development Week. This year’s project was significant, however, as the topic of displacement carried a particular weight for the participants who each carried their own lived experience.
In a special partnership between the Manitoba Council for International Cooperation and the Resilia Community Wellness Centre (formerly Aurora Family Therapy Centre), I met Indigenous students Merek and Linnaya, as well as Ali and Tetiana, who were refugees from Syria and Ukraine, respectively. The group were a part of a youth leadership program at the wellness centre, and each certainly had something to say on belonging and security, whether within Canada, or from abroad.
Considering how Merek and Linnaya are both preparing to graduate into our society and inherit the living history of colonialism impacting all treaty relations, and how Tetiana and Ali had experience with displacement caused by violence in their home countries with literal physical and emotional scars to show for it, I definitely grew in my capacity to support others in expressing themselves. With extra guidance from MCIC’s education specialist and Resilia’s youth program facilitator, we navigated difficult subjects and emotions, and created what was clearly the realest poem to ever come of this program.
With that being the case, I’m proud of our work and must acknowledge the courage that everyone showed in stepping up to share these truths which so tragically affect the young and innocent. But also, the resilience, hope, and grace they carry towards the future.
Before you come see them in person, check out the video!
In the fall of 2024, Adam Pagtakhan of Midnight Sun Creative and I met on the street outside my apartment. As we gazed into an open cardboard box in the trunk of his car with a giddy fulfilment, we couldn’t anticipate the overwhelmingly positive response we would receive for our collaboration. Instantly dismissing the fact that our respective bank accounts had been drained to cover the cost of printing, we were too busy high-fiving and signing each others’ copies of our book to care. Real physical copies! In our hands!
That was the day that Birds of a Feather: A Graphic Poem arrived. It was a project that we initiated during the pandemic lockdown, after some time discussing a collaboration. We’ve been friends since high school; hopeless nerds, deep thinkers and feelers, who have supported each other as we’ve developed our respective crafts and then took the plunge into building careers as professional artists…with day jobs.
It started as something to do for fun, to see what would come of Adam’s visual interpretations of a poem I shared, and which he chose as having provocative imagery and a powerful message of finding empowerment through communing with others who share mental health struggles. We chose the format of a graphic narrative, a.k.a. a comic book, as something we were both familiar with, and something I’d dreamed about creating since I sketched superheroes in art class.
Adam was already a talented graphic designer, finding consistent work designing posters, logos, shirts: you name it. But his initial drafts revealed so much depth that resonated with the material, fulfilling the potential of graphic narratives to transcend mainstream comic strip forms to engage with readers on a truly meaningful level. What we were creating wasn’t quite a comic book, or a picture book with poetic text, but kind of…both, which also leaned into dreamlike cinematic imagery. Taking some literal cues from lines in the poem, he formed a visual meta-narrative of a wounded bird on a journey through dangerous terrain, encountering monsters and pitfalls as metaphors for trauma recovery. Meanwhile, in our little protagonist, he captured expressions and personality that I could instantly connect with as a reader.
When I was invited to perform at Plume Winnipeg‘s Afterwords event, I made sure to bring a few copies to sell, along with Adam himself to acknowledge his contribution from the mic. It was our unofficial launch; we’d only just started posting about it on our social media channels. And even though I hadn’t shared the poem on stage in years, the experience of having bonded with Adam through the material inspired and empowered me to give a meaningful performance. It did seem to resonate with the audience, who immediately snatched up all the copies we had, with someone telling us we should have brought more! On top of that, Adam and I were hounded for autographs, which, despite being touching and humbling, was just unheard of for a couple of self-published creators.
Since then, we’ve connected the graphic poem to readers across the country, built somewhat of an audience here at an ‘official’ launch featuring other spoken word poets and their respective chapbooks, and found support with local shops who agreed to carry it on their shelves. This included a comic book shop, which was like a surreal dream come true! Recently, I shared the poem and discussed the project with a poetry class facilitated by fellow poet, Heidi Sander, in Cambridge, Ontario.
As I shared in the afterword, the way Adam’s art responded to mine and connected us as emotional beings inspired me to see the book as more than just that. It was the reason I chose to include a list of mental health resources (based in Canada), so the book could be used as a tool to connect and heal those who struggle with their own illnesses and existential crises. So far, with the way we’ve connected with readers, we’ve proven to ourselves that we did make something special and meaningful. We’ve also proven that though people may struggle alone, we’re much stronger together. Especially when we create community through art!
To grab your own copy in Winnipeg, visit 204 Comics or House of Local where you can also get a copy shipped from their digital store at the link.
You might have heard through social media posts already, but here’s the official announcement: Our inaugural SLAM! Champion is Tiana Northage!!!!!!!
Our Finals saw the best crowd of our run, and amazing performances from our poets on stage. Thank you to those who spread the word about our little niche production, which is only just a taste of what you might experience in the Winnipeg Poetry Slam community.
Big thanks to Rob Malo for hosting the entire run, and doing a fantastic job of it at that! Also to KimmyZee Jaremglinski for her hard work in mentoring me through the process of building and promoting a show (Rob did a fair bit of that too!).
Big love to my fellow poets who showed up for meetings, fundraisers and shows, knowing that they were all stepping outside of their comfort zones to grow as writers and performers. To Rob Malo, Mike Johnston, Tino Hove, Brenden Gali, Larysa Musick, Kortnee Stevens, KimmyZee, and Tiana Northage, thank you all for coming along on this ride with me. I’m so proud and honored to have experienced this with you.
Thank you to our volunteers, Aaron Simm, Amber O’Reilly, Kier Mailan, Lindsey Olver, Mason Victor Kanne, and Joanne Schapansky for helping us make the show happen. Super big thanks to Stephen Sim, Caitlin Curtis, Rob Gee and Penny Ashton for joining us and helping us to build a space inside of the Fringe community!
We have something here, folks. Something that impacted audience members enough to come back and see us a second and third time. I can’t wait to see the show, and our community grow as a result!
I’m excited to announce that a project I’ve been working on, called SLAM! will be hitting the Winnipeg Fringe Theatre Festival this summer! Gathering up a troupe of 8 amazing poets and one fantastic host, we’ll be showing the theatre crowd what slam poetry is all about in a full-on tournament!
Stay tuned to the SLAM! production website as we’ll be featuring bios and links for each troupe member and posting scores and rankings as the tournament progresses to the grand final!
In the meantime, meet the troupe in person and preview the show at either (or both!) of our fundraisers coming up at the Handsome Daughter, the home of the Winnipeg Poetry Slam!
The 2017/2018 school year is still a ways off, but the new Manitoba Arts Council’s Artists in the Schools Directory is out now! I’m going in for my second year of residencies, working with middle and senior years classes in developing creative communication skills and confident self-expression through spoken word and slam poetry.
The last of my residencies in my first year is about to wrap up, and I’ve already logged quite a few hours building confidence in students’ abilities to construct thought-provoking pieces that touch on personal narrative, cultural awareness, and social justice issues along the way. Also, chapbooks, puppet shows, and classroom open mics!
Visit the Artists in the Schools page to see how the program works, and find me in the downloadable directory (.pdf). Also feel free to navigate over to my For Teachers page to have a look at some lesson plan ideas.
And finally, don’t hesitate to contact me to ask any questions or discuss residency options. I’m all over social media too, @stevelockewpg.
January was a heck of a month! I traveled to Saskatoon to feature in one of my favourite communities (Tonight it’s Poetry!), and had it covered with a travel grant from the Manitoba Arts Council. Later that week, I came in first at the slam here in town, and followed that up with an Artists in the Schools residency at Montrose School, teaching spoken word and public speaking to grade 5/6’s.
Thank you so much to the community organizers, arts admins, teachers and friends who offer me these opportunities to share my work and otherwise live the dream! Please visit the links to learn more about community events and professional opportunities.
This month in town, I’ll be hosting the WPS February slam on the 15th with my birthday-brother Matt Moskal, and visiting H.G. Izatt school with a new lesson plan that incorporates spoken word with chapbooking and puppeteering. The wacky odyssey continues!