Forum is a bi-monthly print magazine elevating the critical study and encouragement of the arts in the Greater Kansas City region.

Forum publishes critical art reviews, photographic essays of art and exhibitions, personal essays, poetry, artist profiles, interviews, and a readers’ forum.

Previously published from 1975 to 2001, Forum has a rich history of facilitating critical conversations in service to our region's visual art, conceptual art, and literary communities. The Kansas City Artists Coalition is excited to revive this publication and amplify new voices as Forum relaunches with the first new issue in 23 years.

Recent issues of Forum will be available in our online archive two months after the publication date.

FORUM Staff

Courtney Wasson, KCAC Executive Director

FORUM Advisory Committee

Anthony Burnside

Erin Dziedzic

Melissa Ferrar

Kimi Kitada

Dr. Stephanie Fox

Christopher Leitch

Harold Smith

Kevin Townsend 

 

Forum’s content includes a mix of critical art reviews, essays, art, creative writing, poetry, artist profiles, and interviews.

Photographic Essays

Forum will include photographic essays that communicate a message primarily through image. These essays may include artworks, exhibitions, or curated images. Including photographic essays will allow readers of The Forum to interpret the images for themselves. 

Essays: Creative and Academic

Creative Writing Essays prioritize artistic expression, imagination, and narrative flair. Unlike academic essays, which focus on presenting arguments or analyzing information, creative writing essays are characterized by their emphasis on storytelling, vivid language, and emotional resonance.

Key elements:

  1. Narrative Freedom: Creative writing essays offer writers the freedom to explore a wide range of topics, themes, and styles. Whether it's fiction, memoir, poetry, or hybrid forms, writers have the flexibility to experiment with different narrative structures and techniques to convey their ideas and experiences.

  2. Imaginative Expression: Creative writing essays encourage writers to tap into their imagination and creativity to craft compelling narratives and vivid descriptions. Writers often use literary devices such as metaphor, simile, imagery, and symbolism to bring their stories to life and evoke emotion in their readers.

  3. Personal Voice: Creative writing essays often reflect the unique voice and perspective of the writer. Whether writing in the first-person or third-person, writers infuse their essays with their own personality, experiences, and insights, creating a sense of intimacy and authenticity that resonates with readers.

  4. Emotional Resonance: One of the primary goals of creative writing essays is to evoke emotion in the reader. Writers achieve this through the use of evocative language, compelling characters, and poignant storytelling that taps into universal themes of love, loss, identity, and belonging.

  5. Exploration of Themes: Creative writing essays often explore complex themes and ideas in depth, allowing writers to delve into the nuances of human experience and societal issues. Whether exploring themes of justice, redemption, alienation, or the search for meaning, creative writing essays offer writers a platform to engage with important questions and ideas.

  6. Aesthetic Beauty: Creative writing essays pay careful attention to the aesthetic quality of language and imagery. Writers use descriptive language, sensory details, and evocative imagery to create a vivid and immersive reading experience that transports readers to another world or invites them to see familiar experiences in a new light.

  7. Artistic Experimentation: Creative writing essays encourage writers to experiment with different forms, styles, and techniques. From traditional narrative prose to experimental poetry to multimedia storytelling, writers have the opportunity to push the boundaries of conventional writing and explore innovative ways of expressing their ideas and stories.

Academic Essays are formal writings that present and defend a thesis or argument based on research and analysis. These essays explore complex ideas, advance knowledge, and contribute to intellectual discourse.

Key Elements:

  1. Clear Thesis Statement: Academic essays typically begin with a clear and concise thesis statement that presents the main argument or central claim of the essay. This thesis statement guides the direction of the essay and provides a framework for the analysis and discussion that follows.

  2. Evidence-Based Argumentation: Academic essays are grounded in evidence obtained through research, observation, or analysis. Writers support their arguments with credible sources, including academic articles, books, primary sources, and empirical data, and use logical reasoning to interpret and analyze this evidence.

  3. Critical Analysis: Academic essays involve critical analysis and evaluation of the evidence presented. Writers examine the strengths and weaknesses of different perspectives, theories, or interpretations, and present a well-reasoned argument supported by careful analysis and synthesis of the available evidence.

  4. Engagement with Existing Scholarship: Academic essays engage with existing scholarship within the field or discipline, demonstrating awareness of relevant theories, concepts, and debates. Writers situate their arguments within the broader scholarly conversation, acknowledging and building upon the work of others while also offering new insights or perspectives.

Poetry

Forum will include poetry as KCAC seeks to be inclusive of the many artists in our community that choose the written word and poetry as their medium. Poetry allows artists to express emotions and experiences, preserve cultural heritage, explore identity and diversity, reflect on social and political issues, celebrate language and creativity, and foster cultural exchange and understanding. 

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