Sunday, March 18, 2012
Solaris
Guess what I was watching tonight... actually I watched Tarkovsky's Solaris last night, along with the American re-make with that just-arrested at Sudanese protest, the arresting George Clooney (while a great sight better to look at, sorry George, and Steven Soderbergh, the director of the re-make, Tarkovsky's film remains a small masterpiece). Tonight it was the interviews with those who worked in and on the film with Tarkovsky. Amazing insights, and I couldn't grasp it all and will watch again. I completely fell for Tarkovsky many years ago, when I first saw Nostalighia, which became my favourite film for the next 20 years, and is still among my all-time favourites.
To say something about Solaris? What in death doesn't die...
( a line from my prosepoem, Whaleskin, sorry, it rose, so I said it)
Friday, March 16, 2012
What is Poetry?
(What is poetry to you...? In this prose poem, I indicated the craft, what wordsmiths poets are, as well as what the essence is to me, but realize that I made poetry sound perhaps rather sweet when there is also grunge, slam, anger, pain. Yet again, as a long-time meditator, I find writing poetry is like the deepest meditation, so the anger and pain are like storms on the ocean, a froth of waves, while the ocean itself is full with steady presence.)
We speak in tongues of poetry, rare spun silk woven into our raw edges.
And echoes, cadence, melody of image, for whom detail, hidden or overt, reveals breadths of vision.
Finesse, complex filigree patterns, considered interlacings of feelings in the verbal clusters of stanzas.
A poem of many voices, strands, cross-currents, opposing winds, and I prefer this to a single slant on, say, Rumi-esque love, or American violence.
Just as the ocean forms each spilling wave wetting our feet while the sand dissolves beneath us, poems should be carefully crafted with total emotional disclosure.
The surfaces, smooth, but buckled.
A self-consciousness of style, a sensitivity, the art of writing fine poetry.
Poetry emerges from our secret words to join the ocean of language through which we communicate. Poems play with grammars. The speaking voice is a tessitura, offered, sung in all its ranges.
Poetry is not only about your feelings; it is about the possibilities of language.
A poet, a jeweller of words, creating a cloisonne of images, a vessel of many colours and opacities like a turning shadow lamp.
If it is not alive, it isn't real.
Not to forget the dissolution of us.
The best poetry is the writing appearing and disappearing at the edge, on the precipices, of the known world.
We speak in tongues of poetry, rare spun silk woven into our raw edges.
And echoes, cadence, melody of image, for whom detail, hidden or overt, reveals breadths of vision.
Finesse, complex filigree patterns, considered interlacings of feelings in the verbal clusters of stanzas.
A poem of many voices, strands, cross-currents, opposing winds, and I prefer this to a single slant on, say, Rumi-esque love, or American violence.
Just as the ocean forms each spilling wave wetting our feet while the sand dissolves beneath us, poems should be carefully crafted with total emotional disclosure.
The surfaces, smooth, but buckled.
A self-consciousness of style, a sensitivity, the art of writing fine poetry.
Poetry emerges from our secret words to join the ocean of language through which we communicate. Poems play with grammars. The speaking voice is a tessitura, offered, sung in all its ranges.
Poetry is not only about your feelings; it is about the possibilities of language.
A poet, a jeweller of words, creating a cloisonne of images, a vessel of many colours and opacities like a turning shadow lamp.
If it is not alive, it isn't real.
Not to forget the dissolution of us.
The best poetry is the writing appearing and disappearing at the edge, on the precipices, of the known world.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Sketch of a Sketcher from a Poetry Salon
Sketch of a Sketcher, from my Poetry Salon in March, of Jennifer Hosein, 21cm x 29cm, 8" x 11.5", 2012, graphite, India and acrylic inks, Moleskine folio Sketchbook A4.
While I had thought to do wild, expressionist colours, to lose the form somewhat, my muse urged me in the direction of delicate restraint instead. Over many hours I created the colours stroke by stroke with a dip pen. Once I started working on this drawing, I knew I wished to keep the original sketch intact, that there is a softness that could not be rendered in ink. Jen's artwork is full of bright passionate colours, and she is a bold and talented writer, and yet, her gentleness, she is a kind, warm, compassionate person.
While I had thought to do wild, expressionist colours, to lose the form somewhat, my muse urged me in the direction of delicate restraint instead. Over many hours I created the colours stroke by stroke with a dip pen. Once I started working on this drawing, I knew I wished to keep the original sketch intact, that there is a softness that could not be rendered in ink. Jen's artwork is full of bright passionate colours, and she is a bold and talented writer, and yet, her gentleness, she is a kind, warm, compassionate person.
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