Saturday, December 27, 2008
Thursday, December 25, 2008
Frost of Dancing Birds
This photo of the frost on a window reminds me of dancing birds.
And dancing birds remind me of the return of the light in the darkness, Solstice, the festival of the trees, birth of the divine child, of the sun-god, rebirth of the spirit.
Sharing with you the image of the frost etched on the window that is dancing birds
celebrating the rebirth of the light...
Happiness, joy, good cheer, generosity, warmth, and laughter...
hugs, love Brenda
Toronto, Christmas Day, 2008
Monday, December 22, 2008
Magnolia Stellata, a videopoem
brendaclews has shared a video with you on YouTube:
From my Botticelli Venus Suite of Poems, 'Magnolia Stellata' is the first poem. I am learning how to make videopoems and while this is a complete version of the poem there is a talk to accompany it that I haven't yet recorded but I share anyhow. I taped this on Solstice 2008. Hope you enjoy this rendition.
It was videotaped with an iMac 10.5.5 and edited in Final Cut Express 4.0.1.
It was videotaped with an iMac 10.5.5 and edited in Final Cut Express 4.0.1.
A little late, but ah well.
My daughter saw it and while she would prefer I cut the hair shaking at the end, she thinks it's my best videopoem to date.
That's praise!
Pre-amble to Magnolia Stellata - another attempt
No, this is not "a video." This is yet another attempt. I videotaped for nearly an hour today and will throw it all out. Posting a tiny clip just because.
I'm working at it; I'm not getting very far. There's another unsuccessful attempt that's better than this one that I may upload tomorrow, don't know yet.
I am learning that creating 'videopoems' is very hard to do!
I'd like to run the text as a line in the top third and have spent a good half hour looking to see how to do that without success!
Learn by doing - that's what this is!
Please forgive. (And the song, too. I'm not sure how to remove it, or if I can. It's from "Yumeji's Theme" on My Blueberry Nights.)
Friday, December 19, 2008
Snow Squall
When I arose this morning, it was dark. As I drew open the bedroom curtains, the world outside was still.
Not one flake swirling, perhaps it passed us by.
In the tiny kitchen, I put on the kettle, and while that came to a boil, measured freshly ground coffee into the Bodum, and put away dishes that were dry in the rack.
Then I went into the livingroom and opened the curtains of five windows.
Between opening the curtains on the one side of the apartment and the other, not five minutes apart, the kettle still coming to a boil, the sky was swirling with blinding snow.
The storm moves with a sharp line across the horizon.
Walking my dog, snow pants, coat collar covering cheeks, only my eyes exposed, the lashing snow stings my eyelids.
In the park, the dog and I chasing each other, there is a lone man in a large navy blue parka and khaki pants.
His arms swirl slowly, one after the other, like warm Pacific ocean waves rolling. His body sways.
In the squalling storm he is gently performing tai chi.
When I pass and smile and say he looks beautiful, those oceanic movements, he says, "A storm is a great time to practice. In Halifax, a whole group of us did tai chi during snow storms."
The store where I bought that nylon coat is gone and it's extremely hard to find 4-paw, underbelly-covered coats for mid- to large-sized dogs and so this one is patched with copious amounts of duct tape inside which holds it together! If she doesn't wear it when there's packing snow hundreds of little balls of snow stick to her fur and cause her to shiver and then I have to bath her carefully at home to melt them off.
Keesha looks a bit like a red rocket chewing on a stick, but you can see the tai chi gentleman in the distance.
Not one flake swirling, perhaps it passed us by.
In the tiny kitchen, I put on the kettle, and while that came to a boil, measured freshly ground coffee into the Bodum, and put away dishes that were dry in the rack.
Then I went into the livingroom and opened the curtains of five windows.
Between opening the curtains on the one side of the apartment and the other, not five minutes apart, the kettle still coming to a boil, the sky was swirling with blinding snow.
The storm moves with a sharp line across the horizon.
Walking my dog, snow pants, coat collar covering cheeks, only my eyes exposed, the lashing snow stings my eyelids.
In the park, the dog and I chasing each other, there is a lone man in a large navy blue parka and khaki pants.
His arms swirl slowly, one after the other, like warm Pacific ocean waves rolling. His body sways.
In the squalling storm he is gently performing tai chi.
When I pass and smile and say he looks beautiful, those oceanic movements, he says, "A storm is a great time to practice. In Halifax, a whole group of us did tai chi during snow storms."
The store where I bought that nylon coat is gone and it's extremely hard to find 4-paw, underbelly-covered coats for mid- to large-sized dogs and so this one is patched with copious amounts of duct tape inside which holds it together! If she doesn't wear it when there's packing snow hundreds of little balls of snow stick to her fur and cause her to shiver and then I have to bath her carefully at home to melt them off.
Keesha looks a bit like a red rocket chewing on a stick, but you can see the tai chi gentleman in the distance.
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Pedro Páramo
Certain books change your life. While I can't say I fully understand the novel, Pedro Páramo, by the Mexican author, Juan Rulfo, having now finished it, yes, I am different. Literature has possibilities I didn't know of before reading this book. Published in 1955, it began a tradition of writing. Rulfo is called the father of the literature of magic realism in South America. In the novel, those who are living and those who have died interweave in haunting ways. Time moves backwards or forwards, you can hardly tell. Characters appear and disappear like wind; memories are everywhere in the air. Everyone's death is foretold again, and again. Put it on your list. A must read.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Woman with Flowers 7.1
(7th sketch in series, first iteration of this one) Woman with Flowers Flowers, props upholding the woman. The flowers, fragrant, imaginar...
-
The Buddha says: “ You cannot travel the path until you have become the path itself .” The path is uncertain. Uncertainty is the guiding for...
-
What if relationships are the primary ordering principle? What if the way relationships are ordered clarify, explain, and instruct us on th...
-
direct link: Tones of Noir music: Alex Bailey, ' Piano Improvisation No 7 .' Do poems wait to be born? A poem whittled out of t...