poemimage

The visual & the poetic.

Tag: ancestors

Oh Grandfather, What Do You See?

Oh grandfather, what do you see?

I imagine you.

You die when I am one year old.

As you fade you build me a basketball hoop.

The mystical Musten Baba poster thumbtacked to a bare wall.

I face the wall balanced on a wooden chair.

A common fly enters the torn screen,

flying lazy figure eights.

Now it multiplies, flash-frozen in the amber air,

dotting and dashing in Morse Code.

A roller coaster in slow motion photography.

A grainy ghost-numbness revolving in my chest.

My mother does not know where I am.

Musten Baba blinking his eyes – open and shut.

Oh grandfather, what do you see?

I imagine you.

I search the mirror cloudy with obsidian rain:

no shaman or spirit-guide, no wise-woman or medicine man,

no ceremony of initiation anticipated with dread,

to face the wilderness with a bone sharpened by stone.

No braying like a donkey beholding pianos made of sand.

Flung into the wind: a kinetic, psychic storm.

Such is fate in this eon of neon.

Oh grandfather, what do you see?

I imagine you.

My wound echoes in temple ruins – I fend off phantoms

with an upper-hook, blowing smoke rings, off-kilter in a scramble,

stuttering verses, stealing my own identity with lyrsergic acid

diethylamide – in the parlance, ‘peaking.’

In this speeded-up version of the monomyth,

still point ascending into a zenith-portal,

climbing a chlorophyll rope ladder to a skull-shaped window,

balanced upon the head-of-a-pin flowering like a lotus.

Oh grandfather, what do you see?

I imagine you.

Ever-scuffling as I am, yet peaking, zeroed in,

I attain knowledge of the mystery

in the shortest eon:

Stone Age-Bronze Age-Iron Age,

Neon Eon.

My End the War button glimmers a spotlight beam.

Faster than a pirouette my knowledge wiped clean,

gone like melted ice cream down a drain.

I struggle to return, I even pantomime

this moment in a history of the psyche.

Oh grandfather, what do you see?

I imagine you.

Knowledge received on the head-of-a-pin

flowering like a lotus:

in negative space – starlight.

in positive space – starlight.

No butterfly net captures starlight

heavy as stone, bronze & iron,

shot through with diagrams of the mystery sun.

Beyond megalithic. Beyond sacred geometry.

Oh grandfather, what do you see?

I imagine you.

Starlight all-consuming as love when love is night,

when love is day. When love is eyesight,

round as the pupil of a mostly-open third-eye.

Too condensed to bear.

I am spared from a thousand-pointed star,

impossibly simple to operate.

Musten Baba blinking his eyes – open and shut.

Oh grandfather, what do you see?

I imagine you.

LSD elves do not get the message, pushing holographic visions-in-a-ball

up a spiral stairway, their breath disappears, the stairway fades as it must.

The chlorophyll rope ladder fades as it must.

Oh grandfather, what do you see?

I imagine you.

My third-eye blinks in a rain forest,

in a cloud on Jupiter, in a comic book.

My heart turns silver opening a vault in the Akashic records.

I cast a bird-like shadow upon tapestries someplace quiet in Atlantis.

Musten Baba blinking his eyes – open and shut.

Oh grandfather, what do you see?

I imagine you.

In the doorway of a pizza parlor painted black,

Procul Harum’s A Whiter Shade of Pale wobbles through a speaker.

I kneel before cosmic colours in a comic book:

a horizontal river of paisley patterns,

flat as a veined dragonfly wing,

pressed to the concrete sidewalk.

Grandfather, oh grandfather, what do you see?

I imagine you.

You die when I am one year old.

As you fade you build me a basketball hoop.

Grandfather, oh grandfather, building in my DNA,

not only in this world but also the world to come,

imagined into being & sculptural form,

as real as a tree – gigantic & wild,

as real as a garden – meek & mild,

existing in duality – imagination and reality,

casting shadows not only in this world,

but also the world to come.

Paisley patterns (only I see) swim like tadpoles, like osmosis,

like a blood transfusion,

creeping up my finger, covering my hand,

rising to curve around my paisley arm.

A Whiter Shade of Pale resounding like Zeus in the heavens.

Faces in the summer morning – heavenly yellow, tangerine orange.

A firebird rises, spreading its fiery wings, above a bone-white temple

filled with typewriter ribbons and glass ashtrays.

Voluminous clouds push into the leaded-glass windows.

Rain is not expected until mid-week.

In the Chiaroscuro Magic Show, an orange parakeet eludes twin birds

of prey. The marionette puppeteer said identical twins.

I was seventeen & flying high.

The underground paper said come to the canyon.

Grandfather, oh grandfather, what do you see?

I imagine you.

My grandfather, V. B., in law school.

Two long-haired girls in the kitchen, move like ballerinas,

table to stove. Music on the psychedelic radio station.

‘Steven, are you hungry?’ One flowery ballerina offers me

a plate with easy-over eggs. I describe a ribbon of

yellow-orange yolk winding through the kitchen air.

She said (quiet as a butterfly), ‘How much did you take?’

I said, ‘Four tabs of comic book acid.’ She calculates.

Round tablets, clay tablets, signalling in language carved with a tool,

with continuity, a scribe’s stylus, or imagination,

in temple ruins baked beneath the mystery sun,

in the language of poetry, prophecy, law & portal,

in pictures that do not belong together sequenced together.

Musten Baba blinking his eyes – open and shut.

She said (quiet as a flower), ‘You might be out for the weekend.’

Ships belonging to the Magi sail overhead,

I intuit poetry, prophecy, law & portal,

the darkened wooden chair mimics my heartbeat

signaling the wooden ships across eons.

I am one year old.

Outside the window

a piano made of sand braying like a donkey

interrupts the anti-war demonstration.

Deep in a cave, stained hands drawing (incantations) on a wall

in depths of darkness, paint mineral-paste scrubbing stiff, short

hairs turned into a brush. Cascading torchlight scorches chalky

twilight auras on the walls.

Animals migrate on the undulating wall, beginnings flower

in belly-vessels, a belly laugh echoes.

Symbols signal sigils, like honey in a tree – there for the taking.

Unseen wheels, a whiter shade of pale, generate the deepest now,

seized in the belly of deepest now – received at the peak

of deepest now.

Thousand-pointed stars operate within teeth & bone & the hypnopompic

state,

magic embers glow, falling dark as crow –

in blackness, the pupil of an eye.

In a musty oak grove, or stepping ashore, or kneeling beside a sacred spring,

hands build the ceremonial hardened by the sun.

Grandfather, oh grandfather, you build the ceremonial,

your reasoning echoes in my DNA.

Keep me clean as a whistle,

turn me homewards in the desert,

to hear the praying sand beneath the mystery sun,

to not commit any crime.

You build me a basketball hoop, round as the sun.

Grandfather, oh grandfather, you understand consequences.

Unless I am imagining things – I promise truthfully,

Yes, I will. And not the other – because I must.

Even if doomed, because I must.

I am a coward but I must. I am a crowbar made of salt.

I am a crowbar made of iron. I am a crow.

You echo in my DNA.

*

*

*

I found the (uncredited) paisley patterns online and ever-so-lightly textured them in Photoshop. To the best of my knowledge, the artist who created Musten Baba is (the late) Rick Griffin, co-founder of Berkeley Bonaparte, a company that created and marketed psychedelic posters. The ‘suns’ I created in Photoshop. The downtown photograph found online (near to locations in this poem) was uncredited.

My grandfather was a law student in this photograph. The original is sepia and clearly defined yet soft. Obviously a long time ago. My (late) mother was close to her father. I started thinking about him quite a lot recently. He died when I was one year old and he built me a basketball hoop.

The highly visual (psychedelic) narrative weaving in and out within the poem is factual. I remember it like yesterday. Of course it was many yesterdays ago. If I start to discuss the poem, and tangential matters, I could end up writing an essay.

In terms of copyright, of course I wrote the poem, and I mentioned in the first paragraph my source of materials, and of course I make no claim on material not mine – which I used for educational & artistic non-profit purposes.

Mostly Working in Silence

I spent ten months, mostly working in silence, creating this painting (& drawing) on a long roll of inviting, warm paper and felt how it used me as a channel. While writing the artist statement (below) I encompassed multiple perspectives concerning the work, probably with a focus on how and why. This material is from a pdf I assembled to promote the work.

As this mystery in blue appears beneath my fingertips my planning designs go up in smoke. The hypnopompic stage of waking illumines the space behind my forehead with images and textures. I begin working sessions with these. Or I simply wake after three hours sleep and begin where I stopped.

I name the painting Druidica. Then Druidica Blue. Then Druidica Blue: Deja Vu. And finally Druidica Blue: Deja Vu (Cave Art for the New Psyche).

In this landscape of the psyche I unearth longing: A quest for the unknown where I imagine belonging. Dripping, staining & flicking the brush I depict shadows cascading across the cave wall. I tumble influences: Prehistory tumbles into the Celtic tumbling into the Medieval tumbling into Modernism of the early 20th Century. I situate myself in art history addressing postmodern amnesia. I re-imagine now.

My journey to this point begins with a shattered ankle. Following surgery I draw page after page of two-dimensional spirals morphing into three-dimensional forms. I investigate spiral symbolism and discover a prehistoric language chiseled into stone. I discover: Newgrange on the River Boyne; Rudolf Steiner’s mystic-trance history of Hibernia (ancient Ireland); Three Cauldrons of Poesy transcribed in the Middle Ages, reportedly of Druidic origin now in Trinity College, Dublin; Joseph Beuys with healing language performing Three Pots for the Poorhouse inside an abandoned Edinburgh poorhouse; Sinead O’Connor singing her incisively poignant Famine. It occurs to me this painting joins the 21st Century to an older type of consciousness.

I begin the 35′ (width) X 5′ (height) painting by dividing sections to be completed one by one. After establishing a pattern I lose control and frame the spontaneous narrative in a more nebulous manner. The painting is flowing the same yet not the same. Perhaps mirroring the work of the psyche. One enters at any chosen spot engaging re-imagined folklore, symbolism, magic and iconography. I work using the blues of art history: Giotto, El Greco, Chagall and Picasso leave their calling card. I kneel to blot standing suddenly writing the poetic phrases I hear, arriving from an unknown place.

Out of some great forgetfulness came this blue sandstorm. In remembering the ancestral I multiply shades of blue. I hear chanting in the echoes.

I relate the process of this artwork to projects I have previously created. In creating cinematic poetry videos I worked (with the editor) to compose performers & surroundings in tandem, in motion, defining the wide screen. The one hundred and twenty B&W linocuts I carve and print for my ‘wordless poem’ Never More Together jangle in unison, though pages apart, connected like cars in a train. I exhibit three Moleskin accordion sketchbooks twenty-one feet in length. On a white wall intricate ink drawings unfold across pages revealing thematic and kinetic relationships. A later series of paintings on canvas makes me wish for the emotional & receptive texture of paper.

I read a magical quest poem, The Song of Wandering Aengus by William Butler Yeats. I rewind videos of the River Glyde in County Louth. I follow ancestral footprints down to the river, set sail for the new world and arrive (as Irish Wonder Tales often begin) A long time ago…I sponge Prussian blue, cerulean blue & ultramarine blue into a receptive & emotional texture until the sea-sponge runs dry. I infuse the blues of art history with a dream of the ancestors. I work a thin brush with round-tipped hairs – texturing the Gaelic mermaid wearing a halo who rises in time outside of time, holding a seashell, vibrating the monumental and mythic. Steeped in lore.

Mirrored images create a jazzy yet alchemical rhythm. I play with the Celtic propensity for seeing in doubles. In visible and not-so-visible relationships. An oracular raven divining portents – a Celtic warrier wounded by an arrow to the heart – a figure aiming a divining rod into the blueness & a herald sounding the (Irish war-horn) carnyx – in nearby spaces one discovers their mirrored doubles. Birds navigate the oracular weightlessness of air.

Energies flash between life forms at the molecular and heroic level. Also in my painting you evidently can get milk from a stone. The dolmen’s udder nourishes the Druid. Metaphorical mysteries nourish the audience. The molecular and heroic awaken the unknown. The painting addresses postmodern amnesia with signs, sigils, and symbols.

I read of who Taliesin might have been and then The Salmon of Knowledge. Water-soluble graphite releases a quivery chiaroscuro of premonition. I paint and draw both freely and controlled, both somber and subversively zany. Ancestors dye their skin blue with plant ink. I rinse my hands.

I squeeze tube after tube of Windsor & Newton white gouache dry. I work with gouache, inks, watercolours (in tubes, pan & pencil), aquapasto medium, graphite crayons & pencils, archival drawing pens, some acrylic, some candle wax. I discover baby food jars of blue & white pigment from a long-ago egg tempera painting class.

A channel forges its way into me causing me to dream this dream. I discover the roll of paper is longer than expected. I continue kneeling. It is finished. After ten months I am exhausted. I have translated my longing.

I envision this work, framed & illumined, welcoming an audience. For inquiries visit here & scroll down to my email.

@ The Redwood Theatre, Toronto. Like unscrolling the forest one lives in, seeing it for the first time.

I don’t know if I mentioned instinctive & expressive brushwork building the composition.

Slowly, Slowly, Like the Turtle Winning the Race

My large painting (& drawing) on a roll of Fabriano paper has turned the corner.

Still down on the floor like a turtle. Maybe the turtle is giving birth.

I’m playing with the title:

Druidica.

Druidica Blue.

Druidica Blue: Deja Vu.

Druidica Vu: Deja Vu (Cave Art for the New Psyche).

GIF Experiments: 12 (Creating digital images from ancient sources to accompany related text)

I adapted the sort of art & design nobody signed their name to for the digital collages in this GIF: book covers and a couple B&W illustrations exploring ancient/antiquarian themes & styles. These digital collages are a ‘mash-up’ (remember that term?) and thus, one could say, new works. I continue creating GIFS using vignettes, or anecdotes, from my December, 2019 literary non-fiction book Meme-Noir.

The vignette here is, I suppose, something that happens when the body creates a metaphor or connects to memory in DNA. It relates to the feeling of the images I worked with.

This is a GIF because it is created in a GIF format but it is inordinately long, almost two minutes, with a huge image file. I will create smaller, more ‘traditional’ GIFS from this group of images.