Pink Studio
Show me the world as pink confection no walls or corners to educate the eye it’s an origami toy unfolded dimensions down to planes and pattern in a joyous calligraphy a bright scribble denying all the old conventions restoring art to where it started in play’s divine enchantment Mary C. McCarthy Mary McCarthy has always been a writer, but spent most of her working life as a Registered Nurse. She has had many publications in journals, including Earth's Daughters, Caketrain, and The Evening Street Review, among others. She has only recently discovered the vibrant poetry communities on the internet, where there is so much to explore and enjoy. This poem was written as part of the ekphrastic 20 Poem Challenge.
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The Unexpected Beauty of Imperfect Things
Floating On the water, drifting in the breeze. Live oak limbs caressing rippling surfaces, sunlight crystallizing , fading, dancing with the shadows. Bullfrogs and loons in chorus, As I sit in canoe quietness enjoying 'shalom' in the Sanctity of the swamp. Robert Thiessen This poem was written for the 20 Poem Challenge. Robert Thiessen worked at General Motors for forty years and is now retired. These poems from the 20 Poem Challenge are his first. Untitled
a long journey through twilight shade as gift of nature I embrace the darkness the light of my inner thought Pravat Kumar Padhy Pravat Kumar Padhy, a graduate and Ph.D from IIT-Dhanbad, loves to blend science with literature. His short form of Japanese poems have appeared in The World Haiku Review, Lynx,The Notes from the Gean, Atlas Poetica, Simply Haiku, Red lights, Ribbons, Haigaonline, World Haiku Association, TanshiArt, The Heron’s Nest, Atlas Poetica, Skylark, Shamrock, A Hundred Gourds, Bottle Rockets, Frogpond, hedgerow, Acorn, Kokako, Presence, Issa’s Untidy Hut, The Bamboo Hut, Modern Haiku, tinywords etc. Recently his tanka have been anthologized in Fire Pearls 2 and Bright Stars, edited by M Kei. His haiku won the Editor’s Choice Award at the Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival, Canada UNESCO International Year of Water Co-operation and The Kloštar Ivanić International Haiku Contest, Creatrix Haiku Commendation Award. http://pkpadhy.blogspot.com Untitled
the brilliance of cosmic dance god particle at the sparkled centre radiates blissful rays Pravat Kumar Padhy Pravat Kumar Padhy, a graduate and Ph.D from IIT-Dhanbad, loves to blend science with literature. His short form of Japanese poems have appeared in The World Haiku Review, Lynx,The Notes from the Gean, Atlas Poetica, Simply Haiku, Red lights, Ribbons, Haigaonline, World Haiku Association, TanshiArt, The Heron’s Nest, Atlas Poetica, Skylark, Shamrock, A Hundred Gourds, Bottle Rockets, Frogpond, hedgerow, Acorn, Kokako, Presence, Issa’s Untidy Hut, The Bamboo Hut, Modern Haiku, tinywords etc. Recently his tanka have been anthologized in Fire Pearls 2 and Bright Stars, edited by M Kei. His haiku won the Editor’s Choice Award at the Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival, Canada UNESCO International Year of Water Co-operation and The Kloštar Ivanić International Haiku Contest, Creatrix Haiku Commendation Award. http://pkpadhy.blogspot.com I am so happy to announce my newly released collection of reflections on art.
Truck, and Other Thoughts on Art Lorette C. Luzajic an Idea Fountain edition, 2015 click on title or image to view or purchase on Amazon. MANY THANKS! Raising the Bar
Come along, mate, Let us cross this concourse of coincidences and pray before this ever-evaporating deity of oblivion. And offer the termite hills of our doubts at the altar of this counter-god. Placed before his liquid justice is our shared compendium of one mind two heads and four arms in the form of some kind of a binary or joke. Are we algebraically trying to tie up the imponderables like mind, head and means,or just offering up our movables like money and matrimony and immovables like kids and tits. But the new mind is a dumb platform like meadows are just mud And the means as always converges to come-what-may. Any which way, let us not go slow into contrition into oblivion. S. Jagathsimhan Nair This poem was written for the 20 Poem Challenge. S. Jagathsimhan Nair is the author of three poetry collections, and has also been published in various anthologies. Monet’s Mirage
Twilight on the Seine: the river plucks sugared plums from a vista too rich for so humble a sight. A stroke of yoke clucks, broods over a custard flourish, (though it honeys the jolt of aubergine.) Listen as Heather hums brightly to Violet, Vive la rose de les villages, while green dances the Farandole. An artful quiet snubs the pleas of black-headed gulls, shuns each lick of russet—no roe deer are welcomed here. If you seek Cattails, best look elsewhere. Still, how cavalier the balm of mauve, prudently winsome, a mirage well worth the cull of crimson. Cyndi MacMillan This poem was written for the 20 Poem Challenge. Cyndi MacMillan poetry has recently appeared in Grain Magazine and the Fieldstone Review. Her verse, short fiction and novel-in-progress resentfully compete for her attention. She lives in New Hamburg, Ontario, home to North America’s largest working water wheel. Coffee and family allow ideas to percolate. Today
Thrift shops. Flea markets. Second hand venues. Old stuff. Used stuff. Nostalgia. Old signs. Old tools. Rusty cast iron. Wagon wheels. Relics. Antiques. Attempting to pull yesterday into today. Eternity in our hearts. Remembering the past. Anticipating the future. Trying to claw the future back. Robert Thiessen This poem was written as part of the 20 Poem Challenge. Robert Thiessen worked at General Motors for forty years, and is now retired. The works he did for the 20 Poem Challenge are his first poems. Vincent's Stars
Did you get lost? Lost in swirl of swirl Cobalt blue sweeping ocean Strokes upon the sky Were you drawn in? Big mustard moon hanging Hanging heavy within your sun-shaped star Spiraling in pulse, above Your quiet little town Your sky throbs. It throbs and rolls bloody veins Fiercely pulsating Turbulent sky I barely see your neat sleeping town, nestled, snug Roofs smooth as rosary beads Poking, that sharp steeple pricking Your already tormented sky And you Mr. Poplar, the sentry guard Of charcoal mane and lion’s roar, Do you reach high High up to other worlds Other minds Lost in your turbulent starry sky? Heather Browne This poem was previously published by the Poetry Quarterly Heather M. Browne is a faith-based psychotherapist, recently nominated for the Pushcart Award, published in the Orange Room, Boston Literary Review, Page & Spine, Eunoia Review, Poetry Quarterly, Red Fez, Electric Windmill, Apeiron, The Lake, Knot, mad swirl. Red Dashboard released her first collection, Directions of Folding. Follow her: www.thehealedheart.net |
The Ekphrastic Review
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April 2025
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