During Spring break, I had some time to work on a little art. I bought these three wooden dishes last summer, and have had plans for them that I am only now carrying out. These are just in the beginning stages. You can't tell from the pictures, but these are actually concave. I haven't started on the third, and I'll probably wait until the direction of these two is clearer. I really like the wood grain and don't want to obstruct it too much, so I am still trying to find a good balance. When finished, they will reflect an imagined narrative of the fractal Sierpinski Sieve (I think). 
She is a little further along, though she has a ways yet to go.
The graphite I used created a bit of a glare for this one.
Saturday, March 20, 2010
A Nod
My friend Hannah has a wonderful blog called Good Books. She recently blogged about one of my artist books "Some Must Watch While Some Must Sleep." You can check it out here Make sure to check out the rest of her blog too!
She is currently working on a cassette tape package for the band Panther Piss. I love the vintage colouring mixed with an edgier feel.
I'm excited to see what else Hannah churns out with her newly purchased letterpress! Thanks for the post, Hannah!
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
I love Spring Break
Today I adhered red-paper-circle-punches to wood painted with gouache. I wrote three poems. I read some too. I walked lots, I drank coffee, I played with a puppy and kitties. Today was a good day.
Friday, March 05, 2010
poem project: day 7


One hazard of posting a poem in progress might be the tendency for a writer to feel that once something is "published" even in such a minor space, the poem's direction has become more set, and the prospect of revision somewhat narrowed.
For me, this process has actually heightened my discernment. It is scary putting something out there in which you already know certain words will change, lines will be cut. It's not that these are filler words though; they need to be there to, at the very least, act as scaffolding; their replacement is not always immediately available. The awareness of an audience has tempted me to add notes such as "yes, I know I've used that word" or "that's clunky, but I need it right now..." because it's hard to put your awkward adolescent little poem-things out there without some apology. But I think immediacy is key for projects like this. In fact, it became almost necessary to type the second draft (after the initial scrawl in a notebook) directly into the body of the email I sent to my collaborators. The first day I wrote several options, small revisions of the versions that came before. Then I had to accept that this was a first draft, and I needed to allow for the possibility first impulses can offer. It's too early to be editing or over-thinking.
Each day I relied less on the starting image. I was not writing an ekphrastic poem and the poem told its own way. I'm already looking forward to the changes I will make, what I will cut, hone.
So, the results of the seven-day project (last section freshly written):
1.
The arrow of time does
not run parallel to the ground.
Only the change in our bodies
can mark a trajectory,
and I can't guess at the order or arrangement
of the atoms that composes us:
an inscription that lists all possible expansion.
2.
I will place myself right in the middle,
my body like a hot missile
mottled from the aftermath of violence.
I can't translate the markings
but my fingers can understand
how a pillar might blush
for the horizon.
3.
Today our slow steps pock the ground's incline,
small hieroglyphics that taper as our feet slow.
You kneel and make a tent
with your arms. Let this shelter suffice
as a marker for when the night divides
our flesh,when we sing desert songs
and gather debris for our only possessions.
4.
To fold in brambles close to chests is to trust
the expression of slope written out
in graphite, on cellophane--
to weatherproof a map's certainty.
I have made a diagram of this sharp roadside brush,
created a new taxonomy
for this unlabeled territory.
5.
This is done with an upturn
of palms, the spread of hands.
The names aren't spoken, instead recorded
with a stick in the sand.
The whole journey is written here--
wind erases and it is time again
to move.
6.
Location folds into motion:
remember only variance
in brightness, or some particular
shadow. Keep small bits
of polished wood or
a brightly colored rock. Keep
them to stand in, to--
7.
Just keep record:
proof that defies
time
even as it marks.
Catalog all sentiments
with an ear
for light, for permanence.
Thursday, March 04, 2010
Poem Project . . .
So it seems that the evidence of process somewhat diminishes when you are under a time crunch. Ergo, my silence on this blog the last few days. Tomorrow is the last day, so I'll post some notebook scribbles/word banks/indecisions as well as all seven sections typed up.
In the mean time, I discovered this interesting article over on BBC News. In describing the various stages of list making, Jane O'Brien notes "the extraordinary sense of satisfaction from having created a rigid timetable of impossible tasks that has taken a disproportionate amount of time and thought.
It doesn't matter that I will never look at it again." I am happily guilty of list-making, and I too rarely look again after a list has been made. Sometimes, I have to make a list to calm my mind down enough to sleep; if I know that I have written it down for tomorrow, I can stop thinking about it today.
Any other list-makers out there? I know some of you...
