Ann Elizabeth Carson Explained

Ann Elizabeth Carson
Birth Date:1929 3, df=y
Birth Place:Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Death Place:Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Occupation:Poet
Website:http://www.anncarson.com

Ann Elizabeth Beattie Carson (19 March 1929 – 16 December 2023) was a Canadian poet, author, artist, sculptor, feminist and psychotherapist.

Biography

Carson's love of words and writing began in elementary school. She published sporadically in high school, during her undergraduateyears at Trinity College, University of Toronto, and while raising four children.

Ann wrote, painted, and sculpted in Toronto and Manitoulin Island. She especially enjoyed reading from her work at multi-media events with other poets, writers, and artists, and with dancers and musicians. Carson also led workshops in how the arts create a new perspective in the ways we see ourselves and our world.

Carson belonged to the League of Canadian Poets,[1] Old Town ARTbeat, the Ontario Poetry Society, the Toronto Heliconian Club, and the Tower Poetry Society. She was a mother to four and grandmother to six.[2] She loved music, theatre, gardening, gallery hopping, and bookstore browsing with family and friends. Carson died at her home in Toronto on 16 December 2023, at the age of 94.[3]

Publications

Selections and reviews of Carson's books have appeared in publications, including the Sudbury Star (2005/10), Canadian Women Studies/les cahiers de la femme (2008/09, 2011), Herizons magazine (2008/9), p o e t r y'z o w n (2009/10, 2011), Celebrating Poets over 70, an anthology published by McMaster University Centre for Gerontological Studies and the Tower Poetry Society (2010), Island Mists, an anthology of the Poetry Institute (2010), Manitoulin Cross-pollination Two, exhibit catalogue of writers and artists (2010), Monhegan Memo No. 6 (2010), OWN Quarterly (December 2010) and Exile Quarterly (September 2010).

Awards

Carson was selected as one of Toronto's Mille Femmes at the 2008 Luminato Festival, which paid tribute to women who have made a contribution to the arts.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: the League of Canadian Poets . poets.ca.
  2. Web site: Celebrating Poets Over 70 Carson Ann . celebratingpoetsover70.ca . 18 February 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110706171628/http://www.celebratingpoetsover70.ca/tag/carson-ann-elizabeth/ . 6 July 2011 . dead .
  3. Web site: Ann Elizabeth Beattie Carson . Legacy . 4 January 2024.
  4. Web site: An Introduction to Ann Elizabeth Carson . anncarson.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110210163630/http://www.anncarson.com/bio/ . 10 February 2011 .