WATERVILLE — Acclaimed poet and artistic visionary Richard Blanco, whose stirring words celebrated the 2013 Inauguration of President Barack Obama and whose creative spirit has been recognized around the world, will be in residence at the Colby College Lunder Institute for American Art starting this month.

Blanco, the spring semester artist-in-residence for the institute’s inaugural year, will teach, work in community programs and offer a public reading of his work during his time in Waterville.

Born into a family of Cuban exiles, Blanco, 50, writes about cultural identity and personal history. A professional civil engineer, he has published three critically acclaimed volumes of his poetry and composed several important works to commemorate events, including “One Today,” which he wrote for Obama’s swearing in. Another, “Boston Strong,” was written in the aftermath of the Boston Marathon bombings. He is also the author of a personal memoir of his childhood in Miami and co-creator of a blog about the Cuban diaspora. His latest work, a fine-press book titled “Boundaries,” is a collaborative project with photographer Jacob Hessler.

“Richard Blanco’s luminous creative work and his dedication to forging community around artistic expression embody the mission of the Lunder Institute,” said Colby President David A. Greene.

President Obama selected Blanco in 2012 to serve as the fifth presidential inaugural poet in U.S. history, following in the footsteps of poets such as Robert Frost and Maya Angelou. He was the youngest, first Latino, immigrant, and gay person to serve in such a role. In For All of Us, One Today: An Inaugural Poet’s Journey (2013), he shared the emotional details of his experiences as presidential inaugural poet and reflected on his understanding of what it means to be an American.

Since the inauguration, Blanco, who lives in Bethel, has been named a Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellow and has received honorary doctorates from Colby, Macalester and the University of Rhode Island. In 2015 the Academy of American Poets named him its first education ambassador.

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“Given my diverse background and careers, I’ve come to truly believe that a broad spectrum of knowledge, dialogue across disciplines, and civic engagement are all essential to learning and keys to success in any field as well as to a fulfilling life,” explains Blanco. “I share these values with Colby and the Lunder Institute, and I’m grateful to both for this residency that will allow us as partners to contribute to the enrichment of the student body and the community-at-large.”

Blanco was awarded an honorary degree by Colby in 2014. At that time, his work was lauded by the college as a “generous and bright-hearted way of saying how it feels to be fully present in two or more places at once … an inspiration in our country of immigrants.”

At 6 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 27, Blanco will read and discuss selections from “Boundaries” and other work centered on the meaning of home and the boundaries of race, gender, class, and ethnicity and challenge the dividing lines, historical and current, that shadow America. The event, in Colby’s Given Auditorium in the Bixler Art and Music Building, is free and open to the public.

In addition, Blanco will teach a course called “Teach This Poem: Poetry and Art in Education,” in which his students will work with area school children at the Alfond Youth Center. These children will then participate in a public reading of their poetry at the Colby museum May 8. Blanco’s engagement with the community will also include seminars for local teachers and small-group workshops at the Waterville Public Library and the South End Teen Center.

“We are delighted to welcome Richard Blanco to Colby,” notes Sharon Corwin, the Colby museum’s Carolyn Muzzy director and chief curator. “His engagement offers just the type of creative dialogue that the Lunder Institute can foster between our Colby and Waterville communities.”

Poet, visionary Richard Blanco to be artist-in-residence at Colby College’s Lunder Institute.

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