Discipline: Literature – poetry

Alice Friman

Discipline: Literature – poetry
Region: Milledgeville, GA
MacDowell Fellowships: 2004

Born and raised in New York City, Alice Friman moved in the 1950s to Dayton, Ohio and then Indianapolis, Indiana. She started writing poetry seriously in her forties and gained a reputation not only for her work and dynamic readings, but also as one of the founders of the Indiana Writers’ Center.

Friman’s most recent book of poetry is Vinculum (2011). Kelly Cherry says of Friman’s Vinculum, “From what it means to be a woman in America to love’s variations to history’s baleful legacies and the Holocaust, there is nothing from which Friman flinches. This book expands our understanding of what a poem is and what it can do—for us and to us.”

Previous full-length collections are The Book of the Rotten Daughter (2006); Inverted Fire (1997); Zoo (1999), which won the Ezra Pound Award from Truman State and the Sheila Margaret Motton Prize from the New England Poetry Club; and Reporting from Corinth (1984). She is also the author of four chapbooks: Driving for Jimmy Wonderland (1992); Insomniac Heart (1990); Song to My Sister (1979); and A Question of Innocence (1978). Her poems have appeared in many journals and anthologies, including The Best American Poetry 2009 and best-of anthologies from Georgia Review, Shenandoah, and Ohio Review.

Friman has been awarded an Individual Artist Fellowship from the Indiana Arts Commission (1996-1997), a Creative Renewal Fellowship from the Arts Council of Indianapolis (1999-2000), a writer-in-residence Fellowship from Bernheim Arboretum and Research Forest (2003-2004), and fellowships from the Yaddo, Millay, and MacDowell colonies. Among her prizes are a 2012 Pushcart, the 2001 James Boatwright Prize from Shenandoah, First Prize in Abiko Quarterly’s 1994 International Poetry Contest (Japan), plus three prizes from the Poetry Society of America: the Consuelo Ford Award, 1988; The Cecil Hemley Memorial Award, 1990; and the Lucille Medwick Memorial Award, 1993.

Friman taught English and creative writing at the University of Indianapolis from 1971 to 1993 and was named Teacher of the Year there in 1993. In 2003 she moved to Milledgeville, Georgia, where she is poet-in-residence in the MFA program at Georgia College & State University. She has also taught at Randolph College, Ball State University, IUPUI, and Curtin University in Perth, Australia.

Studios

Phi Beta

Alice Friman worked in the Phi Beta studio.

Funded by the Phi Beta Fraternity, a national professional fraternity of music and speech founded in 1912, Phi Beta Studio was built between 1929–1931 of granite quarried on the MacDowell grounds. The small studio is a simple in design, but displays a pleasing combination of materials with its granite walls and colorful slate roofing. Inside is…

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