After graduating from the
University of Iowa, Berg received a Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship in Poetry and Translation at the Centro Mexicano de Escritores in Mexico City, where he lived with his wife from 1959 to 1961. In 1967, Berg began teaching poetry and creative writing at the
University of the Arts in Philadelphia, where he served as a professor of humanities for over forty years. He also taught at Temple University, Princeton University,
Loyola University Maryland, and Haverford College. Berg founded
The American Poetry Review in Philadelphia in 1972 and continued as editor until his death in 2014. He published thirty-eight books of poetry and anthologies; and his work was published in several magazines and anthologies including:
The New Yorker,
Poetry,
The Paris Review,
Hudson Review, The Denver Quarterly, A Celebration for Stanley Kunitz on His 80th Birthday,
Poetry London, Antaeus, Arion: A Journal of Humanities and the Classics, Beneath a Single Moon: Buddhism in Contemporary American Poetry, The New Breadloaf Anthology of Contemporary American Poetry, Poets of the New Century: An Anthology, and others. Berg and Lane lived in center city Philadelphia for over fifty years and were integral to a community of poets, painters, architects, designers, educators,
gallerists, and craftspeople. Berg was an art collector and a devotee of the Japanese potter
Toshiko Takaezu. In 1991, Berg collaborated with painter Thomas Chimes on
Sleeping Woman, a public art project commissioned by the Association for Public Art. The work is a 1,125-foot-long line of poetry (the poem Sleeping Woman) painted on a retaining wall along the Schuylkill River on
Kelly Drive in Philadelphia, between the Frederic Remington Cowboy sculpture and the Carl Milles Playing Angels sculptures. He founded Zig Zag Press Publishing in 2013, through which he released
Steam Rising from a Full Bowl of Rice. ==Death==