In Search of Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528) Let me reach through the scrim of five centuries with the language and hindsight of today - to see what I can hold. Morning Outside the window water saturates the sky, the branches are smudged, soft rivulets course through a distorted heaven. This dreamy otherness with its mellow linearity asks for the brush, just a touch of colour and an abundance of water. The willow branches hang low over the stilled water, each one tipped by a quivering globule of liquid. Willing and pensive they sway over their own reflection. This suspension of light, this diffusion of water in air feels like a breath held – when I do breathe out and open the window, the moist, invigorating morning air brushes my face. Below me, in the workroom, I hear footfall, the clearing of phlegm from a night-time throat, and the soft shuffle of my apprentice going about his duties. I will be down shortly. ** What is Beauty? What is beauty I am asked time and again, my answer, “I do not know,” never satisfies. Pressed, I suggest – usefulness, pleasure, and harmony but never seem to give satisfaction. Beauty, my eye tells me, is there in the unformed figure of the young girl, her already too tight bodice encasing her like a bud, in her unfocussed gaze, her lack of knowing, much like in her counterpart, the old woman, the withered crone of my drawings, with her ropey neck, emptied out clavicles, caved-in cheeks and mouth drawn tight that speak of the life endured. I remember reaching for the charcoal stick to release my compassion into the fluting, draping lines, the faint criss-cross strokes across her chest, her heart. But her gaze, that vast pool of disillusionment, has let go of life’s concerns and found a new focus – blankly resigned to whatever time is left. How quickly her familiar face had taken shape under my hand, as I, with a son’s loving surety, smudged the charcoal’s soft burr to soften the lines that life engraved, and that I, it seems, was destined to retrace. Double Portraits As I smooth out the latest likeness of Agnes, my wife, on the worktable, I wonder what made me explore the “double-portrait” the way I have. There are several of them by now, all done over the past year – in the latest, a young girl from Cologne, dreams herself outward just beyond the imagined frame, while my Agnes, her back turned on the girl, fastens her eyes unswervingly somewhere beyond the margin. She will not approve of her likeness, I think – not, that she would tell me as much – she never lost that tightly wound look that I caught in my first drawings of her. And she would be right. There is pain here, the pain of the childless woman trapped in my portrait next to the great absence in her life. Am I cruel to touch that wound with my fine silverpoint pencil, which line-by-line makes this absence become flesh beside her? In other portraits: “Young woman-Old woman”, or “Tobler and Pfinzig,” the pairings were dictated by reason, urged on paper by my entranced hand which loves texture of dress and ornament, yet also tries to delve beneath the surface of skin and bone to snag character in a pair of pursed lips, or the burn and gleam of a pair of eyes. Only one double portrait stands apart: “Caspar Sturm – River Landscape”. Caspar, a huge solid man just took possession of the page. His rough-hewn jaw, dimpled chin, sensitive mouth a perfect study in contrasts – even his eyes with their characteristic cast of one eye looking fiercely ahead, while the other, obliquely turned right, speak of the man. I well remember his soft cap, its complex many-folded shape, earflaps slightly askew as if he had just walked in off the street. No, Caspar’s portrait would not suffer another’s by its side. Instead, I filled in a delicate river landscape, its shore lined with heavy fortifications like the ramparts of an old town. More of a dreamscape, than one seen by the daytime eye. I was never sure whether Caspar approved of this likeness, whether he even recognized himself. Perhaps he just thought I had done well by showing the intricate folds of his homely cap and the narrow ribbon that tied his shirt shut at the neck. By way of an afterthought – two years later, this very same Caspar, aided our man Luther’s escape to the Diet of Worms. ** Noon – or Thereabouts There is always a part of me that harkens to the noises of the household, the part, furthest removed from my point of concentration. At times, my hand does one thing, while I, in another realm, pursue something yet unthought. I may hunt down this elusive prey for days, even weeks. It even invades my sleep – often to good effect. This silent pursuit along a fine-honed edge of attention can lead me to a place, where what my eyes have held, and what my hands have learned, coalesce to bring forth something new. This liminal space I consider my real workshop. Untouched by weather, the tempers of the household, considerations of economy, practicality, and above all, the desire of others, it is my one free space. Carduelis Spinus - Siskin My apprentices often scatter the leavings of their meals along the windowsill. Just now, a slight, scrabbling sound from the open window makes me lift my head from the quarto sheet, and I see, as expected, the compact olive green body, the cadmium-yellow streaked wings, the sooty bib and the tell-tale, inked cap of a siskin. They are numerous around here, filling the air with their ascending and descending trills, their effortless, rapid twitter. Their flitting about, their sudden disappearances remind me of the old tale of the Siskin’s magic stone: the one they guard closely in their nests to assure invisibility. Some time ago I painted one such bird – made him permanently visible. In Madonna with the Siskin, a humble siskin alights on the infant’s left arm, wings aflutter, it animates the whole scene. Wings: Blue Roller and Angels I cannot recall the exact moment when fate dropped the wing of the Blue Roller on my worktable. Not the whole bird, just its neatly severed wing. There it lay, spread out like a fan from the orient, in breathtaking colours of indigo, iron ore, verdigris and wet clay. It recalled the charming tale, apocryphal or not, of the male, who as part of his courtship dance, presents, holding a feather in his beak. This wing unfurled, its complex layers, gradients of colour culminating in veritable cumulus clouds of grey-tinged green, is held by the deep indigo band of the shoulder. How well I remember the pleasure of losing myself in the minute strokes of the downy afterfeathers, which, light as air, put one in mind of the very idea of flight. How often have I crowded my scenes of veneration with countless putti and angels? The whirr of their wings have filled whole images. I wonder, are these the wings of my belief, or of my doubt? “Behold the Man” This is the beginning: age thirteen. My very first self-portrait, its tender half-profile catches the still slumbering awareness of my younger years, each subsequent portrait, in tandem with my standing in the world, moves in increments from delicate silverpoint to the “undying” colour of oil. What was I searching for beyond the act of showing? Beyond the sumptuous silk, the lavish fur trim, the brocade and tassels, my indulgent depictions of hair and my fair countenance, beyond documenting my increased value to the world? Yet, I remember other portraits amongst the many – where, by unmasking skin, bone and sinew my body speaks truer. One, in particular, where my probing look reaches out from the canvas and shows a troubling awareness in the hand raised to shield my face. Was I trying to lift the veil that slides between us and our true knowing of who we are? That sphere just below, and beyond our ken, where we, and what we might be, lies dreaming? Yes, I was searching. Am doing so still. Am still, above all, my own “Man of Sorrows.” The Dream This dream, this vision of the night, ineffable and powerful, took hold of me between Wednesday and Whitsuntide: … great waters fell from the sky four miles on, they hit the earth with such cruel, momentous splashing, such a fury of sound, that all of the land appeared drowned. Some of it fell further away, some closer, giving the appearances of slow motion – but wherever the water hit, it did so accompanied by strong winds and a sound so wrenching, it tore me out of the dream and left me trembling – and for a long time, I could not find back to myself… May God turn everything for the best.* When I surface sucking the air like a man returned from near drowning, I reach for my pen and watercolours. A delicate wash of cobalt seeps in loose runnels from a wan sky, the center column, in a deeper hue, piles volume on volume. Masses of water spreading above patches of delicate ochre that dot a bereft landscape. Why this dread? Why this feeling of apocalyptic doom? What unnameable thing fills me with such terror? Could it be the undoing of form as colour drips like hot wax from an amorphous sky? Or is it the very loss of line, of verisimilitude that throws my art into question? *translation my own ** Night Thoughts How rare these moments of true silence during a sleepless night a silence in which the world itself seems to have fallen by-the-way and yet, I discern a cooling breeze playing in the far-off trees, then, a short scuffle in the courtyard below as if the dogs were torn out of their dreams much later, further off, but coming closer, a rumbling of wheels on cobblestones, their grating metallic ring reverberating on stone I must have fallen asleep just now – found myself back in Antwerp – on the ship. Once more, we were about to be swept out to sea, helpless puppets at the mercy of the fickle elements my life, my life’s work, the grandeur, the hardship, the pain, the joy and the glory no more than the ephemeral gestures of wave after wave dissolving. Finally, the sound of early morning bells, their intermingling harmonies, and the discordance of one belfry competing against the others like a rival belief call me back to the work still undone, and the remaining years waiting to be rounded off. Barbara Ponomareff Barbara Ponomareff lives in southern Ontario, Canada. By profession a child psychotherapist, she has been fortunate to be able to pursue her lifelong interest in literature, art and psychology since her retirement. The first of her two novellas, dealt with a possible life of the painter J.S. Chardin. Her short stories, memoirs and poetry have appeared in Descant, (EX)cite, Precipice and various other literary magazines and anthologies. She has contributed to The Ekphrastic Review on numerous occasions and was delighted to win one of the recent flash story contests.
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Credo Fractal: a cascade of never-ending, self-similar, repeated elements that change in scale but retain similar shape. A cascade of infinite is why I believe in loops and spirals, subtle shifts, cycles. My son, preschooler stunned by the science museum, sticks his hand into a glacier, the chunk a broken testimony, the history of a world dissolving. Cold! It’s cold! And it’s melting. Look right here, he says. Similarities of self astonish. I see them in architecture, geometry a welcome language, shapes a new alphabet for prayer and song. I study Peter Eisenman’s House 11a lapping up patterns, interlocking Ls, squares and replicated rectangles-- the syntax of ideas. For Frank Gehry’s Guggenheim in Bilbao, syntax looks like titanium scales rhyming across curves. Glass and limestone patterns, similarities of visual texture, are creations of weight, depth; order breaks tension where the lines turn. A cascade of repeating elements grounds my belief in humanity as mystery. Signs appear: a sound, song, and syllable mean things. Armadillo! Armadillo! sings my son, the youngest, using his Louis Armstrong voice; grit gives way to twang and twang turns into hard-rock screams. He’s an oracle at four years old, an armor-clad mammal his muse. My oldest son speaks in code, echolalia a symptom of a seizure- besieged brain. When he utters, No and No and No and No, then I don’t know I don’t know I don’t know, I listen for a divine voice revealed. Cascades changing in scale, not shape, is why I trust weight, depth, height—materials and thingness: Saturn’s rings, the Pacific coastline, bolts of lightning, a Romanesco cauliflower, angelica flower- heads, veins of sycamore leaves, seashells, snowflakes, blood vessels, DNA. A range and scope of fractals inspire awe, a cascade of never-ending wonder at both connections and aberrations as well as places of perfect order and broken patterns. When I consider what we may be reduced-sized copies of, I grapple with insight; it hovers in physics and biology, the shapes of letters, the magic of new languages, the mystery of cells and synapses, the music of my sons’ voices, the geometries of buildings and trees. Sometimes I glimpse an answer, something like seeing starlight years after the star dies, supernovas. Four hours before my youngest son’s birth, I dreamed my sister, dead 31 years, placed him in my arms: Take care of him, she said. He has her eyes, ice-blue and illumined by God. Christine Stewart-Nuñez This poem first appeared in the author's book, The Poet & The Architect, Terrapin Press, 2021. Christine Stewart-Nuñez is South Dakota’s poet laureate, is the author and editor of several books of poetry, including The Poet & The Architect (Terrapin Books 2021), South Dakota in Poems: An Anthology (2020), Untrussed (University of New Mexico Press 2016) and Bluewords Greening (Terrapin Books 2016), winner of the 2018 Whirling Prize. Christine’s teaching, creative work, and service has earned accolades from South Dakota State University, including the Dr. April Brooks Woman of Distinction Award (2020) and the Outstanding Experiential Learning Educator Award (2019). She’s the founder of the Women Poets Collective, a regional group focused on advancing their writing through peer critique and support. The Early Hour He looked at her laying so peacefully. Content. Comfortable. The sunlight beaming through the window perfectly shining on her face highlighting her cheekbones and the color in her hair. His dog, Bailey, snoring, sound asleep on the woman's legs. A picture perfect moment. How could anything be more than what this moment was, he thought. Or rather, what it was supposed to be. For years they coveted having this moment. For years, they wished and hoped and dreamed just to have this. The sneaking around, the secret “I love you’s”, all to be together for this. He had hoped that it would feel different. That waking up next to her would feel like it was all worth it and that he would finally know who he was supposed to be with and that she was for sure the one. Instead, he felt nothing. The night they had was incredible and they had acted like it was the most normal thing to be together. The instant comfort and flow of conversation was promising. And then the night ended. His face scrunched up as he thought. Why is this so hard? Is there something wrong with me? He watched her a little more, waiting for a feeling of admiration to come over him like it should have, but where there was supposed to be love and lust and happiness, there was impatience and indifference. There was nothing wrong with her at all, he thought. She did nothing wrong. She is exactly who he knew her to be. The person that he fell in love with over text and facetime and snapchat. She was wild, honest, blunt, caring, smart, creative, all the things that his wife wasn’t, and it intrigued him. Yet, as she laid there, in the place he had longed to have her in for years, it wasn’t enough. Becca Moss Becca Moss: "I’m Becca, I am a Creative Writing Major at PSU focusing on short story fiction. I actually wrote this ekphrasis for a non-fiction class about one of the art pieces in the Portland Art Museum. I didn’t know I wanted to be a writer until years after I had graduated high school and finally started going to college to get my BFA. I look forward to graduating and hopefully having more pieces published!" The Girl I Left Behind Me I think I will never be satisfied. I have to think up names for the three different kinds of wind that lift her hair and coat and part the sky behind her face but don’t blow her wide-brimmed hat away. She’s been reading recently, studying the classics, and I will never be satisfied and she knows it, I think. She knows all about it, knows what I mean when I say I’ve left a girl behind, knows all three winds’ three names. But never mind. It’s cold outside and she invites me in somewhere for a cup of good tea, an earl grey that tastes to me like it knows where the bodies are buried. (They’re buried under the feet of girls about whom all I can say is that their names and faces break the colour right out of the sky.) Meghan Kemp-Gee This poem was first published at Aurora Journal. Meghan Kemp-Gee lives somewhere between Vancouver BC and Fredericton NB. She writes poetry, comics, and scripts of all kinds. She co-created the webcomics Contested Strip and Space Heroines of El-Andoo, and her comics and short fiction have been published in numerous anthologies. Her poetry has recently appeared in PRISM, Copper Nickel, Rising Phoenix Review, The Shore, Stone of Madness, Altadena Poetry Review, Anomaly, Train, and Rejection Letters. She studied at Amherst College and Chapman University and is currently a PhD student at the University of New Brunswick. She also teaches composition and plays ultimate frisbee. You can find her on Twitter @MadMollGreen. Horacio at My Door Again The Universe died. So says Horacio. He’s at my door, again. I keep one hand on the wall, and one on the door knob, blocking his entrance, casually. I got evicted from my last apartment because of Horacio. And before that he got me into a fight with a man twice my size. And the time before that, he convinced my mother I had married a Russian girl who, he claimed, was only after my money. Still, I think of him as a friend. Horacio’s foot is halfway across my threshold. I’m not worried about the demise of the Universe. I’m thinking about the book I’m reading, still open, pages face down on the worn highbacked armchair beside the door. But now, Horacio says, ‘What we think of as life is just an echo. We just keep living the same life over and over.’ And I lower my arm, invite him in to my new home, a four-room apartment, bare floorboards, simply furnished. I don’t understand my relationship with Horacio. We met in a graveyard. It was the funeral of my only Aunt. Horacio had been her lodger. He had doleful eyes, and a long loose-limbed body that seemed about to collapse. I assumed it was grief. But once I got to know him, I understood, this is how Horacio usually appears. At the wake afterwards, Horacio had whispered in my ear, ‘If God exists, He, or She, must be very bored.’ This was the moment I first heard Horacio’s theory that the Universe, from the Big Bang onward, was like an old TV show, repeating again and again, endlessly. Apparently, this answers many difficult questions, and the whole idea is supported by physical evidence and logical arguments that Horacio wasn’t inclined to share. I am fairly open-minded, and I added Horacio and his ideas to my collection of things that might be real, like other realities and UFOs. I pad about my apartment in thick, woolly socks. The floorboards creak under the arch between the kitchen and the lounge. My pink pumps lie side by side under a tall side table I inherited from my aunt. Horacio picks up my book, and puts it down, glances about, like he has lived this moment a thousand times before. David Belcher David Belcher lives on the north coast of Wales in the UK, he is a member of several poetry forums and writes almost every day. His most recent work has appeared in Prole Magazine, Poetry Bus Magazine, Ink Sweat and Tears, The Ekphrastic Review and Right Hand Pointing. David writes and reads poetry because he enjoys it, and for no other reason. He is not a very complicated person. The Rauschenberg challenge responses are up! Click on image above to read them. Don't miss our Thursday zoom workshop on Outsider Artists. A window into the rich stories of the world of artists outside of the mainstream of the art world marketplace. Outsider Art is a problematic umbrella term for visionary artists, self taught artists, artists inside of institutions such as prisons, artists with mental illness or psychosis, artists who couldn't read, remote or rural artists, and more. We will meet some amazing characters and take a look at their work and their world. Outsider Art is one of Lorette's special interests in art history. Join us! A general variety pack Sunday Session follows next Sunday, and a workshop on Jean Michel Basquiat is next week. “If you love learning about art and artists and if you love writing, Lorette's workshops are the perfect place to twine those loves together! Comfortable, educational and inspiring, these two enjoyable hours fly by. And like me, you may linger breathing in the riches of The Ekphrastic Review for your heart and soul.” Fran Turner Outsider Art: an Ekphrastic Discovery Workshop
CA$30.00
Join us on online on Thursday, July 7 from 3 to 5 PM Eastern Standard Time to learn about "Outsider Art," a problematic umbrella term for self-taught art, Art Brut, prison art, art of artists with mental illness, art of artists who are not literate, remote artists' art, some folk art, "raw art," and more. The world of outsider art- art outside the mainstream of the art world narrative- is a fascinating tapestry of human histories. Writers will find endless inspiration in the biographies of trial and triumph and in rich and curious paintings, sculptures, and art environments of artists like Bill Traylor, Sister Gertrude, Henry Darger and many more. We will take a visual tour through outsider art's history, highlighting some fascinating pictures and stories. There will be some creative brainstorming exercises to spark imagination and ideas, and a chance to start or write a poem or story. Doors open at 2.45 PM EST, for those who wish to meet and mingle. We prefer to end our workshops organically after our last discussion and exercise, so they may go overtime. No refunds for cancellations, sorry. We will happily move you to a future workshop if you cannot attend. Our workshops are all about community, creativity, and conversation! We encourage discussion and sharing. We strive for an environment that is both challenging and supportive, to grow your writing practice in unexpected directions. Sunday Session July 10
CA$30.00
Our Sunday sessions are generative creative writing sessions with a variety of art prompts. Join us to write together with a bit of art history, conversation, creative exercises, and more. Sunday July 10, from 2 to 4 PM EST Doors open at 1.45 PM EST, for those who wish to meet and mingle. Workshops often go over by 15 minutes. We prefer to end them organically after our last discussion and exercise, rather than abruptly. Creativity. Conversation. Community. We aim to have interesting, informative content and challenging exercises to inspire your art journey and writing practice. We encourage discussion and sharing. No refunds for cancellations, sorry. We will happily move you to a future workshop if you cannot attend. Basquiat: an ekphrastic discovery workshop
CA$30.00
Join us on Tuesday July 19 from 3 to 5 PM Eastern Standard Time for an ekphrastic discovery workshop on the life and art of Jean Michel Basquiat. Basquiat's iconic graffiti-style urban imagery and fascinating body of work are a playground for our imagination. We will learn about Basquiat, his life, and his art. We will use his images in some writing gym exercises to unlock fun possibilities for writing, and as prompts directing us to conjure new poems or stories. Doors open at 2.45 PM EST, for those who wish to meet and mingle. We prefer to end our workshops organically after our last discussion and exercise, so they may go overtime. No refunds for cancellations, sorry. We will happily move you to a future workshop if you cannot attend. Our workshops are all about community, creativity, and conversation! We encourage discussion and sharing. We strive for an environment that is both challenging and supportive, to grow your writing practice in unexpected directions. New York City Haiku Out after midnight, walking his shadow, the city chilled with winter’s close, moonlight on concrete grey beneath streetlamps, he spots her reflecting through silver and scarlet sparks in the glass. Within, palming her coffee, she watches the silence start to bend toward the spectrum’s bluer end. Timothy Sandefur Timothy Sandefur is an attorney and author in Phoenix, Arizona. His latest book is his first poetry collection, Some Notes on the Silence, from Kelsay Books. As If Doves Love lifts with bright destination its clarity rises in strokes. It lilts in luminous whispers its radiance navigates north. It shines in the optics of lions glows in the lens of intent honors a peaceful coexistence a sustainable union with Earth. It flows in the garden phlox nectar where hummingbirds stop for a sip as daylilies bloom give honeybees room to move pollen from anther to stigma. It slips into canopied forests where sunlight dances about it serves to imbue keeps flora anew supports life where shadows trap growth. It beams in the soul of an artist renders a visionary course where symmetry seeks lustrous sweeps inspires a painter’s true north. It shines in the optics of humans glows in the lens of intent where brides treasure grooms illuminate rooms as wedding bands glisten with faith. It gathers over the oceans in waters where vibrancy lives as whooping cranes flock and honeybees talk to the pollen on daylily blooms. It stirs in the murmur of breezes hums as if chorus of doves swirls in the ripples of rivers beats like the cadence of drums. Unity vibrates in balance with reciprocal offerings of love. Jeannie E. Roberts Jeannie E. Roberts lives in Wisconsin, where she writes, draws and paints, and often photographs her natural surroundings. She’s authored seven books, five poetry collections and two illustrated children's books. Her newest collection, As If Labyrinth - Pandemic Inspired Poems, was released by Kelsay Books in April of 2021. Her poems appear in Anti-Heroin Chic, Blue Heron Review, Sky Island Journal, The Ekphrastic Review, and elsewhere. She’s an animal lover, a nature enthusiast, Best of the Net award nominee, and a poetry editor of the online literary magazine Halfway Down the Stairs. Dorothy Embacher is a visual artist from Meaford, Ontario. Her creations are influenced by the waters of Georgian Bay and the woodlands of the Niagara Escarpment. Dorothy works in a variety of media, including painting, printmaking and collage. Her process is intuitive, shaped by poetry, personal experience, and collaboration, inspiring art from poetry, poetry from art, with a deeply environmental perspective. She has exhibited at Meaford Arts and Cultural Hall, Owen Sound Banner Project, and the 2020 International Telephone Game. Her latest work will be featured in the 608 Exhibition, to bring attention to 608 trees that may be destroyed by developers. Botticelli’s Annunciation There is an architecture to this room the Virgin’s in – its grey walls and red floor are laid out, not as blueprints are, but in perspective. Through the open door, a scene of land- and cityscape. There is a ship in what must be an estuary, and a single tree beyond the patterned garden. The Virgin sees the angel Gabriel, in pink and gold and gauze. His folded wings are grey and green. In his left hand, a lily. His right performs a blessing. As he kneels, the Virgin makes a modest sign to him. She has a holy pallor, as the Spring or Venus of this painter don’t; she is secure in blue and red or fuchsia, and a gold band trims her blue robe. Around her feet, her gown shades to a pink that’s quite identical to Gabriel’s. Could she not stay in red and blue? Or had the painter grown weary of those colours? Gabriel delights the eye. And why should angels not? There is a joy to this art that you might look for in vain before it. It is still, and Mary’s flesh has a metallic sheen – and yet, its pink and blue and red and gold trace a new world. As if a rusty door swung open onto Venus, we alight where sunshine plays and hope is not a poor ersatz for living – where each might-have-been comes true, and all the world does what they will. We dream. We do whatever fits the bill. John Claiborne Isbell Since 2016, various MSS of John’s have placed as finalist or semifinalist for The Washington Prize (three times), The Brittingham & Felix Pollak Prizes (twice), the Elixir Press 19th Annual Poetry Award, The Gival Press Poetry Award, the 2020 Able Muse Book Award (twice) and the 2020 and 2021 Richard Snyder Publication Prizes. John published his first book of poetry, Allegro, in 2018, and has published in Poetry Durham, threecandles.org, the Jewish Post & Opinion, Snakeskin, The HyperTexts, and The Ekphrastic Review. He has published books with Oxford and with Cambridge University Press and appeared in Who’s Who in the World. He also once represented France in the European Ultimate Frisbee Championships. He retired this summer from The University of Texas – Rio Grande Valley, where he taught French and German and coached men’s and women’s ultimate. His wife continues to teach languages there. |
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July 2022
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