Showing posts with label Robyn Hood Black. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robyn Hood Black. Show all posts

Friday, April 5, 2013

Poetry Friday Comes With Cupped Hands



Welcome to Day 5 of Drawing Into Poems, my daily drawing/seeing/writing study into poetry.  You can read more about this month-long project here on my April 1 post.  Feel free to read the books with me and pull out your own sketchbook and jewelry box full of metaphor too...

As a part of this project, you may remember that along with the daily drawings, I will be posting at-least-weekly poems inspired somehow by that week's drawings.  Here is my first one.


I will add audio to this poem by weekend's end.

Students - If you look back at my April 4 sketch, you will find this note written in the margin -  - "a tiny bowl is like a handful - maybe 2 cupped hands..."


When I pored over my first few drawings of this month's project, this image of two cupped hands is what stuck to my heart.  There is something very intimate about cupped hands, and writing about them today made me think about many other movements we make with our hands: shaking hands, holding hands, holding pencils, throwing baseballs...the list could go on and on.  I may write more poems to go with this one.  You might too.

Today's poem mixes up the senses a little bit.  One cannot really taste a dream of old coyotes in real life.  But in a poem, you can do anything, and it is important to try anything. You might wish to try this in your own writing: jumble your senses.  Let a color have a sound, or describe the feel of your kitty's purr.  These are not the usual ways we use our senses, but experimenting with unusual and magical sensory connections can add a mysterious and almost hauntingly lovely quality to a line or two.

Please let me know if you try this. I would love to read what you write.

(When I awoke this morning, I remembered another one of my special-tasting-drink poems.  You can read Warm Drink from January!)

And here is the drawing of the day: my own foot in my own shoe.

Day Five - My New Old Shoe

Students - It was interesting to draw my shoe yesterday.  We were waiting for the train to arrive here  in DC, and the train was twelve minutes away.  When my daughter suggested that I try to do my whole sketch in that amount of time, I thought, "Why not?"  I recommend that you try this too.  Set a timer.  Maybe ten minutes, maybe five, maybe twelve or twenty.  Then see what grows in that amount of time.  Sometimes I think that a time limit helps us to push through any nervousness about jumping in.  (I did the notes after the twelve minutes were up.)

Robyn Hood Black is hosting today's Poetry Friday roundup at Life on the Deckle Edge.  If you're new to Poetry Friday, this means that at Robyn's blog, you will find links to many different poem posts around the Kidlitosphere today. We welcome you to join us every Friday, all year long, as we celebrate, share, and write poetry together.

A Bowl to Hold
Photo by Amy LV

Please share a comment below if you wish.
To find a poem by topic, click here. To find a poem by technique, click here.
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Friday, December 7, 2012

Quilt Map & Spark 18!


Untitled
acrylic, some pencil, and collage on board. 8" x 8"
by Amy Souza


 
Click the arrow to hear me read this poem to you.

Students - Once again, I have had the fun of participating in SPARK, brainchild of Amy Souza.  In this round, Spark 18, I happened to be paired up (again, yay!) with artist Amy Souza herself.  Ten days ago, she sent me a digital file with the above painting, and it was my job to write a poem (it could have been anything) inspired by her piece.  Now, on day 10, I am allowed to share it!   Many other Spark participants (82 this round) are also sharing their collaborations and will be posting the to the Spark website throughout the week.

Spark is a refreshing and invigorating community event here on the Internet, because it presses a writer or an artist to go in a new direction than he or she might have otherwise.  When I first looked at this painting, I fell in love with the colors...then I found a chameleon.  Later, I saw a quilt.  Then, one morning the rhyme patches/matches took hold in my head and Amy's image combined with my wordplay brought "Quilt Map" to life.

Here are the words I chose very carefully for this poem:  stitches, swatches, matching, patches, snuggle, batches, stacks, watch, sew, grow, map, flannel, patterns, lap, wore, tore, seas, snatches, quilted, land.  Do you notice anything special about any of them?  

Oh, how I adore shopping at the word store...where everything is free!

This poem is written in quatrains, except for the last stanza which I wanted to stretch out a little bit.  If you listen to me reading it, you will hear how the last two lines have a bit more of a pause in there...because those lines are the most important part.

This time of year always makes me think of making things: cookies, decorations, dinners for many, gifts! What do you like to make?  Have you ever written about something you made?  Have you ever made a poem as a gift?  Trust me - people like it.

You can see that her very vibrant work made me think of a quilt!

You can see all of my past SPARK collaborations here, and on Monday in this space, look for Amy Souza's artwork inspired by my poem, "Wherever You Are -."

If you have not yet visited Sharing Our Notebooks to read about Mary Lee Hahn's notebooks, she's still there with a a wonderful post and a giveaway too.

Robyn is hosting today's Poetry Friday roundup over at Read, Write, Howl!  Stop on by her place to learn the poetry news in the Kidlitosphere today.  You can also visit Robyn at her very cool etsy shop, artsyletters.

Please share a comment below if you wish.
To find a poem by topic, click here. To find a poem by technique, click here.
Like The Poem Farm on Facebook for more poems, articles, and poemquotes!