Category Archives: Rhode Island Expo Spotlight

Rhode Island Author Expo Spotlight – Paul F. Caranci #riauthors

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Rhode Island Author Expo Spotlight – Paul F. Caranci

This post was originally posted on Martha Reynold’s blog and has been reposted here with author permission, minor revisions have been made.

Sculptures, statues, monuments and memorials are Greco-Roman in origin and constitute the many forms of public art that are now scattered throughout the world.  Rhode Island is home to many of these masterpieces and the City of Providence has its fair share that now stand as a testament to the people, places and events that have had a profound impact on the shaping of the history of Rhode Island’s capital city.

Providence is also home to the very first statue installed at a public site in Rhode Island. A statue of Benjamin Franklin cast in zinc by Richard Greenough, depicting Franklin holding a scroll in his hand with a tricorn hat tucked securely under his arm, was positioned in 1855 in front of the Franklin Lyceum building on Westminster Street. The location of the statue today is shrouded in mystery.

Providence sculptor Frances Hoppin remarked during the statue’s impressive ceremony, “This is the first public statue in Rhode Island! Let it be but the beginning of a phalanx of statues! Let our heroes, our poets, our statesmen, our philosophers, and our men of worth, live among us not only in the form of their achievements, but in monuments of iron and bronze and marble, adorning our streets and parks, perpetually preaching their virtues and telling us that they once lived and acted, and were flesh and blood like ourselves.”

Hoppin’s vision speaks to our reality, as hundreds of examples now dot the Rhode Island landscape. Providence leads with its 100-plus samples of monumental fine art. Though most of the great monuments were placed from 1870 to the 1920s, figurative sculpture continues to be in demand.

Some are architectural gems while others evoke wonderment and amazement. Still others defy most logical attempts at discernment. Yet each represents an era past and possibly forgotten by the casual observer if not for this lasting remembrance of what once was.

Perhaps the grandest of all Rhode Island monuments is the Soldiers and Sailors Monument in Downtown Providence’s Kennedy Plaza. It is programmatically complex, with over a dozen relief plaques, four larger-than-life figures, and one monumental figure. The monument is large in scale – the base alone is 32’ high. And, it was an expensive enterprise for a small state, costing $57,000 in 1871 dollars, exceeding the $50,000 budget by some 14%.

These monuments to the past can be found in many places throughout Providence and take on a plethora of forms. Some honor the men and women who fought our wars for freedom while others memorialize the story of intense love shortened by premature death (Bajnotti Fountain, Carrie Clock Tower, The Spirit of Youth, etc.). Still others pay tribute to mythological figures (Orpheus Ascending, Terpsichore, etc.). Each magnificent piece of art has a story just as breathtaking as the piece itself.

Take the time to notice this magnum opus as you travel throughout the state.  Learn the story that inspired each work.  You will surely gain a new appreciation for Rhode Island’s tour de force!

Paul Caranci co-authored, with his daughter Heather Caranci, Monumental Providence: Legends of History in Sculpture, Statuary, Monuments and Memorials.  The 323 page book describes all 103 piece of public art throughout Providence and includes over 100 photographs.)

Find our more about Paul and his books here

His LinkedIn profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paulcaranci

His Facebook page: paul.caranci

His Twitter: https://twitter.com/paulcaranci

Rhode Island Author Expo Spotlight – Steve Porter #riauthors

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Steve and Dawn Porter manning the Stillwater River Publications table at the Scituate Art Festival.

Rhode Island Author Expo Spotlight – Steve Porter

This post was originally posted on Martha Reynold’s blog and has been reposted here with author permission, minor revisions have been made.

It was the last question of the session and one I was not prepared to answer.

The young woman had shown great patience, waving her hand at me in a non-stop metronome of energy from the back of the room. I had been speaking from the podium to a group of authors and publishers about the Association of Rhode Island Authors (ARIA) that I had founded and served as president. The story of ARIA’s founding is one I retell with immense pride. It’s a story of how a handful of writers who were dissatisfied with the attention their books were receiving chose to collaborate, and now just four years later, over 250 published authors had joined what has become the fastest-growing and most productive arts organization in the state.

“Your group sounds amazing,” she began. “Who knew Rhode Island had so many wonderful writers!”

“Thank you! We have time for just one more question.”

“With all the work you do for ARIA, do you plan to write your own book someday?”

Her question was worse than receiving a mailbox full of rejection letters. My heart sank; I had no response. I had founded ARIA for purely selfish reasons — to promote my two independently published novels. And now it occurred to me that after four years of building my platform, speaking and marketing, I had omitted one tiny detail.

Yes, I write, too!

Most see me as the guy who runs ARIA. I’m the guy who sets up special events, meets vendors, and makes contact with other groups. I’m the guy who writes by-laws, sends emails and runs meetings. However…

I’m also the guy who started writing in college and became editor of the award-winning literary magazine, The Great Swamp Gazette, where I wrote political commentary and satire. I’m the guy who worked in bookstores for twelve years organizing celebrity book-signing events for Tanya Tucker, Isabella Rossellini, Doug Flutie, Aerosmith and others.

I’m the guy who took 25 years to write his first novel, Confessions of the Meek and the Valiant — a gritty coming of age crime saga set on the mean streets of South Boston. I’m the guy who followed that up with the cozy historical novel Manisses, inspired by the rich history of Block Island that was an award-winner at the New England Book Festival.

I’m the guy who writes the humor blog, Along the Village Green, wrote the horror short story The Kanc, published an award-winning essay in Newport Life magazine, and won a fantasy short story contest in The Attleboro Sun-Chronicle. I’m the guy who in 2016 hopes to release a co-authored non-fiction book, Scared to Death… Do It Anyway, a young adult baseball novel called Fiddlehead, and finally finish my dystopian science fiction novel, Chronicle of Hugh.

I’m the guy who founded Stillwater River Publications with the love of my life to guide writers who need help publishing their own works.

And don’t forget, I am the president of ARIA, too!

Click on any of the highlighted links above to learn more about Steve and his award-winning work, and visit his website here!