Sunday, April 20, 2008

To James Joyce and Virginia Woolf


There are three yellow flowers in a single vase by my mother's bed. The bees have been brought up to the edge of the petals, dusting their wings with the pale and aromatic pollen, and I blink three times as I sit on my chair. My inner mind rejoices in the subtle nuances of this new day, the thirteen buds that have just broke on the tree that is bare but will soon be swollen with living and blooming life. The harsh call of movement, incessent progression, breaks like a penitent's whip on his naked back, the goosebumps of exposed flesh mingling in between the red welts and failed drops of blood. I am asked to move forward, to pass quickly, to enter into a world of mechanical and constant movement. The whirl of a fan circling calls me to enter sooner, faster. And I find that I must. But then the flowers die and I pity that I never saw one petal wilt.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

stretching my own canvas

Sometimes I think and dream in less lyrical terms and I want to lay these thoughts on paper in a way that I feel lives up to the idea's potential. I have recently been inspired to pick up a paintbrush and pencil. I think I will stop by Meininger's this weekend. When Monet and I went to see Jesus Christ Superstar at the Buell Theatre, we came across an artist that drew a young boy riding a fish. It was a painting that made me want a son so I could hang it in his room. I can not remember the name of this gentleman and I can not locate a picture of the painting even using google. Recently another artist reminded me of this fellow and I am starting the search anew.

Below is the other illustration that inspired me: