Sunday, January 24, 2010

A Point of Exclamation


The Owl
--by Ted Hughes

I saw my world again through your eyes
As I would see it again through your children's eyes.
Through your eyes it was foreign.
Plain hedge hawthorns were peculiar aliens,
A mystery of peculiar lore and doings.
Anything wild, on legs, in your eyes
Emerged at a point of exclamation
As if it had appeared to dinner guests
In the middle of the table. Common mallards
Were artefacts of some unearthliness,
Their wooings were a hypnagogic film
Unreeled by the river. Impossible
To comprehend the comfort of their feet
In the freezing water. You were a camera
Recording reflections you could not fathom.
I made my world perform its utmost for you.
You took it all in with an incredulous joy
Like a mother handed her new baby
By the midwife. Your frenzy made me giddy.
It woke up my dumb, ecstatic boyhood
Of fifteen years before. My masterpiece
Came that black night on the Grantchester road.
I sucked the throaty thin woe of a rabbit
Out of my wetted knuckle, by a copse
Where a tawny owl was enquiring.
Suddenly it swooped up, splaying its pinions
Into my face, taking me for a post.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Art 101


Introducing ART 101 GALLERY, located at 23 Public Square, Suite 11,Medina, Ohio. The gallery features artists, including Janet, from the local surrounding area, as well as throughout the state of Ohio. Those Thursday receptions sound like fun!

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Winter


This is an older painting showing one sister holding the other, who is sick. The figure in yellow looks on.

Tuesday, January 05, 2010

The Harlem Renaissance in DC

A Walking Tour Led by Kim Roberts

Announcing a free walking tour of the greater U Street neighborhood, "The Harlem Renaissance in DC," led by Kim Roberts. Presented by Holly Bass Performance Project, in honor of the 108th birthday of former DC resident Langston Hughes (on February 1).

Date: Saturday, January 30
Time: 10:15 am (until approximately 11:30)
Location: Starts and ends at Busboys & Poets Bookstore, 14th & V Streets NW
Cost: Free, but advance reservations required

This tour covers the Jazz Age in Washington, DC, when the movement known today as the Harlem Renaissance got its start. And it started--despite its name--right here! DC was home to Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Jean Toomer, Georgia Douglas Johnson, Alain Locke, and Jessie Fauset--some of the most significant writers of the Renaissance. Learn about the "Black Broadway" of U Street, with its clubs, houses, and thriving small businesses.

Limited to 25 participants. Please wear comfortable walking shoes and carry water.
NOTE: If it is raining, snowing, or the temperatures are below freezing, this tour will be rescheduled for the following Saturday, February 6. (We want to honor Langston Hughes, but not suffer for him!)

To RSVP: please send an email to langstondays@gmail.com.

Kim Roberts
http://www.kimroberts.org