Showing posts with label Poemstore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poemstore. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
Words of Love (by myself and others)
"Many men (women) go fishing all of their lives without knowing it is not fish they are after."
--Henry David Thoreau
"Your vision will become clear when you look into your heart. Who looks outside, dreams. Who looks inside, awakens."
--Carl Gustav Jung
"Love is but the discovery of ourselves and the delight in the recognition."
--Alexander Smith
"We are like sculptors, constantly carving out of others the image we long for, need, love or desire, often against reality, against their benefit, and always, in the end, a disappointment, because it does not fit them."
--Anais Nin
"She took her pattern of life from men but she was not a masculine woman. She demanded the freedom to change, to evolve, to grow. She was not a feminist at all but struggling against the feminine side of herself in order to maintain her integrity as an individual."
--Anais Nin
On Lillith:
"an independent woman can only represent a fundamental disruption of a divinely ordered state of affairs."
--John Phillips
"Love cannot exist in peace, it will always come accompanied by agonies, ecstacies, intense joys and profound sadnesses."
--Paulo Cohelo
"Think not you can direct the course of love, for love, if it finds you worthy, directs your course."
Kahlil Gibran
"At the touch of love everyone becomes a poet."
--Plato
Here's my latest love poem :)
"Of Course One can never under estimate the Power of Love, for Love is the Essence of all Creation."
--sua
"If "love" makes you crazy, it is not love. True love drives you absolutely sane."
--Alan Cohen
"Love is a canvas furnished by Nature and embroidered by imagination."
--Voltaire
"If you have it (love), you don't need to have anything else, and if you do't have it, it doesn't matter much what else you have."
--Sir James M. Barrie
"If you cannot inspire a woman with love of you, fill her above the brim with love of herself; all that runs over will be yours."
--Charles Caleb Colton
For more thoughts on love:
Read some of my original Love Haikus and yesterday's Long Distance Relationship in Haiku post.
Friday, July 22, 2011
"I Call Myself an Artist..."
"...Poets sound old and dead," said Zach Houston, the writer who developed the concept for "Poemstore".
Lately his ""Poemstore" is set up in the Bloch Building at the Nelson Atkins Museum in Kansas City, MO. Houston can be found typing wildly on a typewriter in the middle of four tall white walls covered in sheets of paper of all sizes tagged with images, words, and random ramblings he creates. His brain is in overdrive, meeting strangers, one after another, lined up waiting for him to write whatever comes to his mind on a whim.
How does he decide what to write? Where do these lines reside? In a bank of words, with a special vault for when he feels like pulling out the really nice lines? Or in a cultural storehouse of mixed emotional baggage and ethical recalls. Could you imagine the pressure? First impressions mean absolutely everything in the type of poem you are going to create. That's money for Houston! Literally.
So, I visited Zach today at the Nelson and we talked quite a bit, regardless of the line behind me. I waited my turn. I had questions to ask this guy. He was legit. A money making poet artist. Super cool in my book. Anyway, my poem took quite some time, since we kept talking throughout its composition, but I totally respect what he does and tipped him $4 for my poem. I thought about this a lot and wonder, "How much is a poem worth?"
Hmm. Good question. What is an acceptable donation for a personal poem?
Here we are at the Poemstore.
Before he wrote anything, I told him I am a writer as well. I shared with him the three haiku poems I wrote while waiting in line to meet him.
I wrote:
The typewriter sound
Echos through the stone hallway
Tapping on the walls
Imagination
Transforms real into fiction
And fiction into real.
What is left of art?
Odd shaped canvases on walls
Or typewritten poems?
He replied:
amanda could you be
author of more
adorable than
words wild
run a way
to get from
one place to
say and another
to write what
we think
without
knowing it
whimsy and
wondering what
im talking about
when the person
who i am and
why talking to
when in due time
i talk more
than work
its because im
exhausted bored
lonely and
overwhelmed
by time
i get
the phoenix
to sleep she
will ready to
xx type again
Lately his ""Poemstore" is set up in the Bloch Building at the Nelson Atkins Museum in Kansas City, MO. Houston can be found typing wildly on a typewriter in the middle of four tall white walls covered in sheets of paper of all sizes tagged with images, words, and random ramblings he creates. His brain is in overdrive, meeting strangers, one after another, lined up waiting for him to write whatever comes to his mind on a whim.
How does he decide what to write? Where do these lines reside? In a bank of words, with a special vault for when he feels like pulling out the really nice lines? Or in a cultural storehouse of mixed emotional baggage and ethical recalls. Could you imagine the pressure? First impressions mean absolutely everything in the type of poem you are going to create. That's money for Houston! Literally.
So, I visited Zach today at the Nelson and we talked quite a bit, regardless of the line behind me. I waited my turn. I had questions to ask this guy. He was legit. A money making poet artist. Super cool in my book. Anyway, my poem took quite some time, since we kept talking throughout its composition, but I totally respect what he does and tipped him $4 for my poem. I thought about this a lot and wonder, "How much is a poem worth?"
Hmm. Good question. What is an acceptable donation for a personal poem?
Here we are at the Poemstore.
Before he wrote anything, I told him I am a writer as well. I shared with him the three haiku poems I wrote while waiting in line to meet him.
I wrote:
The typewriter sound
Echos through the stone hallway
Tapping on the walls
Imagination
Transforms real into fiction
And fiction into real.
What is left of art?
Odd shaped canvases on walls
Or typewritten poems?
He replied:
amanda could you be
author of more
adorable than
words wild
run a way
to get from
one place to
say and another
to write what
we think
without
knowing it
whimsy and
wondering what
im talking about
when the person
who i am and
why talking to
when in due time
i talk more
than work
its because im
exhausted bored
lonely and
overwhelmed
by time
i get
the phoenix
to sleep she
will ready to
xx type again
Labels:
art,
Haiku,
Kansas City,
mom,
museum,
Nelson Atkins,
Poemstore,
Poetry,
srtist
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