Kush Thompson
Author of A Church Beneath the Bulldozer (New School Poetics, 2014), Kush Thompson (she/her) is a Chicago-born poet, painter, and educator. She creates archival art, often centering on girlhood and the mechanics of memory. Her work has been published in Poetry magazine, The Chicago Reader, and The BreakBeat Poets: New American Poetry in the Age of Hip-Hop (Haymarket Books, 2015).
For several years, Kush served as an educator with Young Chicago Authors’ Teaching Artist Corps, debuting her portraiture series, Blk Hottie, in 2016. Voted runner-up best local poet of 2014 by The Chicago Reader and a 2015 Young Futurist by The Root, Thompson has performed and facilitated creative writing workshops both nationally and internationally. She is a Luminarts, Pink Door, and Cave Canem fellow.
As an organizer, Kush cocurated The Lady Church, a series of monthly workshops and annual showcases for women and femmes, and briefly served as organizing and chapter cochair of Black Youth Project 100 Chicago.
CPC Readings
Friday, March 25, 2016
with Ben Clark
Comfort Station Logan Square
Thursday, June 30, 2016
with H. Melt
Intuit: The Center for Intuitive and Outsider Art
Thursday, November 21, 2024
Blue Hour Reading Series
with Monica Rico
Haymarket House
Poetry by Kush Thompson
This, we tiptoe.
This, we flower in euphemism.
The street has swallowed itself into border. Into railroad track.
This, where the bus line ends.
the hand I use for nothing, butterflied
open in a veiled room. she walks to the end
of my palm and says she sees no children
and so many.
