Melissa hosts Poetics In the Pub ~~ she challenges us to explore how our perspectives and biases inform how we might perceive art. Melissa provided artist Emil Nolde's backstory for us and asked we read it prior to diving into our poems ~ asks are colors and feelings the same after discovering more about him? Does his art tell a new story? Are we as writers separate from what we create?
'Stormy Sea' c. 1930 - 1940
color bleeds
saffron, vermilion, bruised blue
a silent storm
on linen rough
shadows clawing at light
a man can paint beauty
yet still be stained
a painting can glow with spirit
yet bear the weight of silence
color will not absolve
Wonderful full of bright colors and emotions!!
ReplyDeleteGood night Helen!
Very good! " ... shadows clawing at light"
ReplyDeleteAn evocative poem, so well expressed, Helen! I love all the colors.
ReplyDeleteA wonderful poem, Helen. You have said it very well! You closing is very powerful!
ReplyDeleteI also love this image: ...rough shadows clawing at light
Those last three lines especially hit home.
ReplyDeleteYour title is so apt, Helen, and I love the opening line, the ‘silent storm on linen rough’, and the colours. I agree, ‘a man can paint beauty yet still be stained’.
ReplyDeleteHi Helen, I love your collage of colours poem. Robbie Cheadle
ReplyDeleteyou hit this one out of the ballpark! i loved this interpretation.
ReplyDeleteBrava! So well said, Helen! Love it.
ReplyDeleteAye.......the 2nd stanza........everything came home, word by word.....the first two lines of the 2nd stanza would make such a great discussion, Really liked this very much Helen..
ReplyDeleteThat was phenomenal, Helen! I loved it!
ReplyDeleteYvette M Calleiro :-)
http://yvettemcalleiro.blogspot.com
The two stanzas serve as the before and after of Melissa's prompt Helen, I especially liked
ReplyDelete"a man can paint beauty
yet still be stained"...
Those last three lines added such power to this poem, Helen.
ReplyDeleteA stellar poem Helen, the joy of colour followed by the observation of lasting stain
ReplyDeletewise and true ~
ReplyDelete