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Cambridge MA United States
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Artist's Statement
Blood Machine by KB Kinkel is a chapbook of poetry. The collection begins with a poem called "Well," in which the speaker peers down through an expanse of time-considering almost the three decades of surveillance, ecological destruction, xenophobia, and violence that have defined their adolescence and early adulthood-and asks, "how did we get here?" These poems of witness, excavation, and extraction sift through artifacts of cultural memory, beginning with the literal and aesthetic detritus of 9/11. They work to locate the present moment within an unfolding series of violences beginning with, or significantly informed by, the turn of the 'new millennium'-an event that coincides with the speaker's own coming-of-age and unstable transition into gender, adulthood, and citizenship. The poems in Blood Machine juxtapose languages that vary from deep time and evolution to archival and found materials as a means of tracing a personal and cultural lineage to the present. Kinkel uses ekphrasis to engage with twentieth and twenty-first-century visual artists (Marcel Duchamp, Damien Hirst, Eric Fischl, Mona Hatoum) whose works explore violence and representation at the turn of the century, or who engage directly (and at times unintentionally) with the cultural narrative of 9/11. Not entirely an elegy, and neither fully an archive, Blood Machine resists any one rhetorical mode for considering post-9/11 artworks and documentation. Instead, these poems ask their readers to look closely and continuously at one of many defining moments of twenty-first-century art and violence to see what has been omitted, and what such reconsideration might reveal about the present.
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KB Kinkel is a poet, writer, and educator based in New England. He is the author of Blood Machine, winner of the 2025 Chapbook Open Competition from Finishing Line Press. The recipient of the TQ32 Poetry Prize, Kinkel was longlisted for the Frontier Award for New Poets in 2023. His poems, essays, and reviews have appeared or are forthcoming in Tupelo Quarterly, Ninth Letter, Prelude, The Rumpus, Poetry Online, and elsewhere. He holds an MFA in poetry from the University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop and lives in Massachusetts, where he teaches high school English and creative writing. More of KB’s work and projects can be found at kbkinkel.com.