Sandra Beasley - free

Art in the cafe...

Ruth Comfort


"The Metaphysical Affect"


January 2026



A diverse collection of mixed mediums, extensively encapsulating my heart and soul concerning the dreams of the human condition. ARTISAN RUTH COMFORT My given name is Ruth Comfort. Named after the amazing artist Louis Comfort Tiffany. I hail from a very long line of artisans and musicians. Even dating back to the great German philosopher...
[ more ]


Tamara Lea Kaufman


"pretty ~ ugly"


February 2026



Artist Statement Tamara Lea Kaufman’s personal artwork ranges from serious to quirky, dark, adult-themed humor. She creates multimedia assemblage, collage, and dioramas made from HO-scale railroad hobby miniatures, preserved insects, paint, embroidery, found objects, and typically discarded materials such as candy wrappers and the overlooked debris of everyday life. Her work explores topics of consumption, waste, desire, relationships, psychology, politics, societal pressures and the levity of humor needed to survive it all. It gives her joy to repurpose materials into something new, useful, or...
[ more ]


Saturday, December 3, 2011

When butter is deadly and eggs can make your throat swell shut, cupcakes and other joys of childhood seem out of the question. So Sandra-s mother used to warn guests against a toxic, frosting-tinged kiss with -Don-t kill the birthday girl!- Tackling a long-marginalized subject, this book intertwines a cultural history and sociological study of food allergies with humorous, sometimes heartbreaking real-life experience. From a short-lived gig as a restaurant reviewer to the dates that ended with trips to the emergency room, step inside the story of a modern young woman coming to terms with a potentially deadly disorder.

The Boston Globe said \"In this charming book, part memoir and part handbook, poet Sandra Beasley forthrightly casts herself and others with serious food allergies as \'people who-for better or for worse-experience the world in a slightly different way.\' Beasley is a warm and lively guide to the quirky world of allergies, demonstrating on page after page that this \'is not the story of how we [the allergic] die-[but] the stories of how we live.\'\"

Sandra Beasley is also the author of I Was the Jukebox, winner of the Barnard Women Poets Prize, and Theories of Falling, winner of the New Issues Poetry Prize. Her poetry has appeared in such venues as the 2010 Beast American Poetry, Slate, and The Believer; her prose has appeared in Psychology Today and the Washington Post Magazine. She lives in Washington, D.C., where she serves on the Board of the Writer\'s Center.