On Seeing The Little Shepherdess Swimming the glorious, noisy tides of World Pride 2014, exultant in the blooming of my long dormant femininity, borne along by an electric current, immersed in a supportive sea of companion emergent chrysalids. Perspective soon needed, floating off to bathe in art’s calming waters and breathe in the quiet of Toronto’s AGO; approaching Paul Peel’s little nook, like me a London, Ontario local, best work done in exotic Paris, taken so young, not yet thirty-two; my ruminations interrupted, flashing back twenty-seven years, a special exhibit in our home town, one painting that unfathomably wound a tentacle around my heart. And there, high up on a wall, the screen of trees in the distance, meadow sloping down and left to a pond just in front, lily pads and blue irises, attendant blossoms to the little shepherdess bursting from the background, seated on a large rock, her charges grazing amongst the trees, crook, clothes and cares cast aside, hair garlanded with delicate pink flowers, skin glowing with expectation, a demurely sensual and unveiled adolescent, quietly bold, gazing at nature’s mirror echoing her incipient beauty, left foot curled shyly under, right testing the pool awaiting her. Awash in a wave of meaning, transfixed, sinking down to contemplate this image done in oils a century ago, but seeing my reflection. Separated by decades in age from the model posing outside for the first time, this moment by more than one hundred years from the young artist’s loving strokes, his vision’s eternal youth from my all-too-real aging flesh and blood; but we three, model, vision and I, still compeers, sister adventurers setting out into a vast beckoning ocean. Jennifer Wenn Jennifer Wenn is a trans-identified writer and speaker from London, Ontario. Recently published is her first poetry chapbook, A Song of Milestones (Harmonia Press). She has published poems in Open Minds Quarterly, Tuck Magazine, Synaeresis, Big Pond Rumours, LOCP Fresh Voices, Wordsfestzine, and the anthology Things That Matter, and has written From Adversity to Accomplishment, a family and social history. She has also spoken at a wide variety of venues. Jennifer has a day job as a Systems Analyst at Canada Life and is the proud parent of two adult children.
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Horse and Train Horse of iron, horse of flesh, Each suspended in their track, There’s no forward, there’s no back And the space that lies between Will never widen or decrease, Nor will their motion ever ease, Nor force disrupt their equipoise. Each committed to their course, There is no train, there is no horse. The grasslands grow and do not grow, There is no cloud, there is no smoke-- Just paint. And light. The brush’s stroke. Though always in your mind you see The two collide, the dark horse rear. There is no swerve, there is no fear Except your own. You are the beast, you are the brake. You are the dream from which you wake. Lisa McCabe Lisa McCabe lives in Lahave, Nova Scotia, Canada. She studied film at York University and English Literature at University of North Carolina, Greensboro. She has published poems in The Sewanee Review, HCE Review, The Orchards Poetry Journal, and Limestone Review among other print and online journals. So Struck By 12/14/18 after a painting, Still Life, by Jean-Baptiste Oudry and a news item A Dead Hare, a Dead Red-legged Partridge and Two Dead Snipe, the bird strung up, hare slumped on slate. He didn’t see the woman in red stockings, swiped by a speeding car earlier that night her skirt pulled up to her waist. A Dead Hare, a Dead Red-legged Partridge and Two Dead Snipe was on his mind, each feather with a hint of light, each barb precisely placed. He didn’t see the woman in red stockings, swiped like the red paint on the legs of the partridge, dried to a dark blood stain in the still life labeled, A Dead Hare, a Dead Red-legged Partridge and Two Dead Snipe. Savoring each detail — the eyes sealed sightless, two highlights of glossy jade, he didn’t see the woman in red stockings, swiped but still breathing, lying there in moonlight, a mere shadow until he felt car hit shape -- a dead hare, a partridge or two snipe? He didn’t see the woman in red stockings, twice swiped. Diana Cole Diana Cole, a Pushcart Prize nominee, has had poems published in numerous journals including Poetry East, Spillway, the Tar River Review, the Cider Press Review, Friends Journal, and the Main Street Rag. Her chapbook, Songs By Heart, was published in 2018 by Iris Press. She is an editor for The Crosswinds Poetry Journal and a member of Ocean State Poets whose mission is to encourage the reading, writing and sharing of poetry. Summer Song It’s not yet too early for celebration, sunwashed in white light. Clouds strewn across the sky like milk blooming into coffee. She moves through the season with tickets in her hand, feathers around her neck. Flowers dot the ground like tiny stars. Men watch from above, as faceless as time, their breath constant and insistent like the wind. The duchess of watercolor and all her contradictions, no longer carrying the globe on her back. No longer fishing in the mountains of grief. She presses on, her gaze resolute and looking forward, as if the past is just a myth told by somebody else. Leela Srinivasan Leela Srinivasan is an MFA student at the Michener Center for Writers at the University of Texas at Austin. Originally from the Jersey Shore, she holds a BA in Psychology and MA in Communication from Stanford University, where she wrote and published a collection of psychological poetry as her undergraduate honors thesis. She currently lives in Austin, Texas. A Lady in Waiting I can see by your expression that he is late. How much longer, you’re wondering, should you abide by the trunk of this tree. You have dressed so carefully. It is a striking outfit, pearl taffeta with ash-flowered trim, the fitted jacket adorned at the cuffs with three-inch-wide lace, the skirt’s top tier pulled back in a small bustle to showcase the shape of your hips. Your red-gold tresses have been coiled into a French twist, errant strands curbed by a black velvet ribbon, tied in a comely bow at the crown of your head. You have brought your folding silk fan, the amber one with its daring crimson collar. Did you intend to use it in coy flirtation or was it merely to waft the heat from your face as it is surely doing now on this breathless mid-summer afternoon? Should I tell you that you are destined to wait like this forever? Mary Kipps Mary Kipps has appeared regularly in poetry journals and anthologies across the U.S. and abroad since 2005. She is also the author of three Kindle eBooks of paranormal satire: All in Vein, A Sucker for Heels, and Bitten: A Practical Guide to Dating a Vampire. Join us for biweekly ekphrastic writing challenges. See why so many writers are hooked on ekphrastic! We feature some of the most accomplished, influential poets writing today, and we also welcome emerging or first time writers and those who simply want to experience art in a deeper way or try something creative. The prompt this time is Still Life, by Giorgio Morandi. Deadline is July 24, 2020. The Rules 1. Use this visual art prompt as a springboard for your writing. It can be a poem or short prose (fiction or nonfiction.) You can research the artwork or artist and use your discoveries to fuel your writing, or you can let the image alone provoke your imagination. 2. Write as many poems and stories as you like. Send only your best works or final draft, not everything you wrote down. (Please note, experimental formats are difficult to publish online. We will consider them but they present technical difficulties with web software that may not be easily resolved.) Please copy and paste your submission into the body of the email, even if you include an attachment such as Word or PDF. 3. Have fun. 4. USE THIS EMAIL ONLY. Send your work to ekphrasticchallenge@gmail.com. Challenge submissions sent to the other inboxes will most likely be lost as those are read in chronological order of receipt, weeks or longer behind, and are not seen at all by guest editors. They will be discarded. Sorry. 5.Include GIORGIO MORANDI WRITING CHALLENGE in the subject line. 6. Include your name and a brief bio. If you do not include your bio, it will not be included with your work, if accepted. Even if you have already written for The Ekphrastic Review or submitted other works and your bio is "on file" you must include it in your challenge submission. Do not send it after acceptance or later; it will not be added to your poem. Guest editors may not be familiar with your bio or have access to archives. We are sorry about these technicalities, but have found that following up, requesting, adding, and changing later takes too much time and is very confusing. 7. Late submissions will be discarded. Sorry. 8. Deadline is midnight, July 24, 2020. 9. Please do not send revisions, corrections, or changes to your poetry or your biography after the fact. If it's not ready yet, hang on to it until it is. 10. Selected submissions will be published together, with the prompt, one week after the deadline. 11. Rinse and repeat with upcoming ekphrastic writing challenges! 12. Please share this prompt with your writing groups, Facebook groups, social media circles, and anywhere else you can. The simple act of sharing brings readers to The Ekphrastic Review, and that is the best way to support the poets and writers on our pages! Pick up these Ekphrastic Review ebooks and join us in celebrating five years online! The Ekphrastic World ($20 CAD/$15 USD) is a curated collection of visual art prompts from all over the world. Your purchase serves three purposes: it supports the Review on its anniversary; it gives you a big book of prompts; and it qualifies you to submit 15 poems or 5 prose pieces to the upcoming, corresponding anthology, due November 1. An ebook anthology with selected works from these prompts will be published in early 2021. Fifty Ekphrastic Approaches is a collection of 50 ideas and exercises for you to use in your ekphrastic writing practice. ($8CAD/$6USD). Click on covers to view or purchase securely. Self-Portrait With Skull Could have been carved from the chalk downs: long scarp to the muzzle, yellow-white, flint-blue, plus rust and mud. Among harebells, gorse ploughed fields, a skim of umber, bone wearing through. I can’t do landscape any more. One of the children found it, up on the Ridgeway; and I thought memento mori, The Ambassadors. Arrogance! Brittle, pared away, and the window-light colours it earthwards. Imagine it galloping against the skyline. Grins now. Such confidence. For centuries. I was a painter, once. I sit for myself. Empty-handed. Cobalt dress. Ruth Valentine Ruth Valentine lives in Tottenham, England. Her latest publications are Downpour (Smokestack Books 2015), Rubaiyat for the Martyrs of Two Wars (Hercules Editions 2017) and A Grenfell Alphabet (self-published in aid of the Grenfell Tower fund). She's also published a novel, The Jeweller's Skin (Cybermouse Multimedia 2013) and various works of non-fiction. Ruth is an activist on migration and refugee issues, and works as a funeral celebrant. Juliet Wood was born in 1939, grew up in London and trained at St Alban’s School of Art and The Slade School of Fine Art. Her long painting life has covered a nation-wide portrait practice, extensive teaching and exhibitions in London and the south of England, including a major retrospective with new work at the Bankside Gallery, London 2019. Juliet Wood’s paintings and oil pastels are inspired by the realities of contemporary life, human interaction and the poignancy of what is so often seen yet unspoken. She lives with her husband, the wood engraver Simon Brett, in Wiltshire and has three sons and two daughters. www.julietwood.co.uk www.julietwoodportraits.uk Drawing Willendorf*, a Large Model Colossal, mammoth, unclothed, Lying in my studio, eyes closed, She is a gigantic mountainside, Earthquake fissured, rainfall softened. Flesh becomes power within palisades And gaps of enfolded crevices. A spirit emerges from her shelters, Fecund and fertile, filling our space. I wait for a tremor to force my hand, An aftershock or a thunderstorm, Ready to draw her at the moment Shadow, shape and perception collide. She inspires broad charcoal for the hunt, Images freed from burnt-out bonfires Rendered quickly in sweeping strokes. But, I draw slowly, to know her In a thousand ink marks, pondering her, The mother of shadow and luminance. The soul of Willendorf, life’s origin, In silence receives me, line by line. James Shay *The so-called “Venus” of Willendorf is a small, Upper Paleolithic era carving, circa 23,000 BCE, of a large woman discovered in Austria in 1908. A painter with twenty one-person shows throughout America, James Shay writes ekphrastic poetry based on his experiences making art. Before becoming a fulltime artist in 1997 he spent thirty-one years studying and practicing architecture. Photographs, models and drawings of his office's work were featured in shows at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and other venues internationally. He is as yet unpublished as a poet, deciding this May to begin submitting poetry for consideration. He lives with his wife Karen, a sculptor, among the vineyards of Sonoma, California. From time to time, wonderful Sonoma Valley wines assist his writing and painting. The website is www.Jamesshay.com. Women Birds and a Star My bobinette flaps over each shoulder, fitted to a Juliet cap garlanded by spring flowers, heels pared to fit satin shoes, silk gown clings to skin smeared with petroleum jelly, bird-tears darken circles under feather-eyes, but flying high I’ll star-gaze pulled by magnetic force to Saturn, deck myself in diamond raindrops stuck to the mesh of my tulle veil. Janet Murray Janet Murray completed an MA in Writing at Sheffield Hallam Uni (2016) with Merit and won 1st Prize in the Fish International Poetry prize in 2018 with an ekphrastic poem called Vernacular Green which was published in their anthology of the same year. It was based on Howard Hodgkin’s relationship with the colour green. She has had individual poems published in The New Statesman, Sentinel Literary Quarterly and Millstone Grit anthology. She is currently completing an advanced poetry course with Richard Price at the Poetry School. Two women walk past the huge cavity where one of the ancient Buddhas of Bamiyan, known to locals as the "Father Buddha," used to stand, June 17, 2012. The monumental statues were built in A.D. 507 and 554 and were the largest statues of standing Buddha on Earth until the Taliban dynamited them in 2001. Afghanistan. Sgt. Ken Scar / Public domain The Buddhas of Bamiyan The pair of great stone statues, taller than thirty ferengi soldiers standing each atop the other’s shoulders, if such a trick can be imagined, were guardians of our Valley for longer than my people can remember. In summer’s heat our children ran circles round the statues’ feet to make a breeze, held themselves stiff like tent pegs, then rolled in and out of the crevices between the monstrous cold stone toes Big toe, middle toe, pinky toe. The old men say their fathers’ fathers’ said the statues were faced with gold once. Gods brought from the East, then forgotten. The old women say the statues were lovers, who, for their sin, were cocooned in the sandstone cliffs. Near enough to hear the other’s heart beat but never again to touch. I wanted to see stone yearning toward stone. That was my sin. One morning I stripped off the blue burka with its eye slits that made my world dim and narrow, looked upon the golden cliffs and understood the majesty of the faceless Gods. I will carry the dishonour of my act and that light within me forever like a black lamb and a white one. In the fighting season when the Taliban came we ran with our children into the painted caves deep behind the statues. Hide what you love. They will smash it first to kill you faster. After the victory, they took our men away and declared the statues an affront to piety. The ritual cleansing of the Valley with tanks, bombs on long sticks, artillery lasted twenty-five days. When the stones of the statues were dust in our mouths and eyes they rejoiced, and brought nine fat cows to slaughter. Lottie Erikson Lottie Erikson studied English Literature at Tulane University in New Orleans. Her first job after college was as Poet-in-Residence working with institutionalized populations in Louisiana. Most of her adult life has been spent living and working in other countries as an agricultural development specialist. She retired from Islamabad, Pakistan to the mountains of North Carolina in 2017. |
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