Show Archive:
- Caesura
- Georgia to Georgia
- Bloomsday:
A James Joyce Celebration - Beyond Krog Street:
Urban Portraits by Doug Barlow - Velcro Show 2006
- Continuum - New Portraits by Bryan Meltz
- Poets & Writers: An Evening of Poetry
- Home and the War
- Unconquered: Images of Cuba
- Here and Now
- Raging in the Gloom: Jack Kerouac Birthday Tribute
- Pelusa
- The Bridal Show
- Bloomsday: A James Joyce Celebration
- The Velcro Show 2007
- RockShow
- In Our Midst: Photographs of Candler Park
- Voices Carry 4: An Evening of Poetry & Spoken Word
- Strange True Tales: Photographs by Joeff Davis
- Pedestal Magazine Reading Event
- Translations
- ExLucis 2008
- International Women's Day Poetry Reading
- A Thousand Words
- Body/Text Project
- Bloomsday: A James Joyce Celebration
- Sorrowful Tunes from a Sunny Land:
Photographs from the Republic of Georgia - Sorrowful Tunes of Sunny Land
- Velcro Show 2008
- New York, New York: Photographs by Sylvia Plachy
- The American War: Photographs by Al Rockoff
- 3rd Anniversary Rent Party and Inauguration Celebration
- Bloodline, AIDS and Family: Images by Kristen Ashburn
- Durham Stories: Not Hell But You Can See It From Here
- The Dream of Life: Photographs by Dorothy O'Connor and Jenny Williamson
- The Path Worn In The Grass: A Marathon Reading of Walt Whitman's Song of Myself
- Rock Show 2: Rock 'n' Roll Photography
- Eminent Domain: The PiƱon Canyon Project
- The Cowboys vs. The Army
- Communion: A Found Photo Show
- Velcro Show 2009
- 4 For Four: 4th Anniversary Show
- Photographs by Dorothy O'Connor
- Talking Back To The Muse
- May Day Art Party for Haiti
The Path Worn In The Grass: A Marathon Reading of Walt Whitman's Song of Myself
May 30 2009 8:00pm - 10:00pm
In Celebration of his 190th Birthday
Presented by Poetry Atlanta and Composition Gallery
Happy 190th Birthday, Walt Whitman. Poetry Atlanta and Composition Gallery present a non-stop, straight-through, marathon reading of Walt Whitman's Song of Myself ("there is no stoppage and never can be stoppage"). Readers to include local writers, poets, teachers, students, and whoever else wants to "sound their barbaric yawp over the roofs of the world."
