Monday, 9 May 2016

Waves and Leaves

                          
leavesWaves and Leaves
New leaves
               are shivering ,
                              pinned by
                                        their petioles.
In saffron morning light –
                                 a portent of rain –
                                               each apex an index
finger
        pointing and
                       playing in
                                   the breeze
making masses of
                        lime green
                                     palms, waving
                                                          jazz hands.

Sunday, 8 May 2016

Good, or Popcorn, Morning World

Good Morning World!

today I have eaten
a popcorn
parody for breakfast
sugarcoated
and noted how forlorn

it left me

Here's a link to the last of three poems that Reuben published in The Curly Mind ( https://thecurlymindblog.wordpress.com/2016/04/30/salves-douloureuses-by-karen-barton/ ). Thank you to Reuben for his kindness.

Saturday, 7 May 2016

I'm on the cusp of having to submit my last assignment for my present course before slipping off into the world of studying art history... and it is scary!!!

I've had to channel all my poetic efforts into the submission but... well, my poetry brain won't stop and keeps pushing up new thoughts at a tangent. So below I've put a small poem that cropped up during the night and a link to another poem of mine published in The Curly Mind - my thanks yet again to Reuben and his kindness for giving it a home. (The image on the right was my inspiration.)










Empty Spaces

These are the empty canvasses 
for images stolen or destroyed.
These are the empty shelves 
for books or authors burnt.
These are the empty seats 
for those who did not survive 
or took their own lives rather than 
survive. 
These are the empty buildings not safe 
as houses, that 
fell before their time. 

Fill them with new arts that Creatives have created,
building on the tracery traces of what others had learnt. 

Monday, 2 May 2016

My poem 'Venetian Blinds' finds a home....

I’m so proud to say that my poem Venetian Blinds has been accepted by The Curly Mind poetry ‘zine’. 

My inspiration was the fantastic artwork seen at Salts Mill (http://saltsmill.org.uk) where David Hockney displays artwork created on his iPhone and iPad. Heaven!



My thanks to Reuben Woolley, the amazingly dedicated site owner for giving the poem a home amongst such wonderful poetry.

Sunday, 1 May 2016

The Voice of the Lacuna!

So this is my autobiographical submission for my TMA 04 (fourth tutor marked assignment) for my current creative writing course. I chose to start the memory poem with my morning walk and remembering my mother, who died two months ago. The paper cut might have to be re-photographed as I'm not happy the image but apart from that I'm fairly happy. 

The Voice of a Lacuna Conjured Up With Smoke and Mirrors

      i. Violets: For the Woman Behind the Camera.

It was bitter today. A low winter sun shone without warmth.
I walked, remembering you, while tiny ice sparks blew
against my face. It was trying to snow and I was trying to forget.

The violets were out, not knowing it was early, scenting the air
with funerary florals. Memories of you came and went with
ice shards and violets; stinging, elusive, recurring, and I remembered…
Violet scent, once registered by olfactory receptors, temporarily nullifies them before reemerging, like a magic trick or flashes of memory.


ii I Learned the Truth at Seventeen, Waiting Silently, in the Wings

Backstage spaces are cousins of soft black nihility.
Curtain hyphens cleaving scenes

and the unseen, sundry assemblages (animate /
inanimate) quartered backstage, redundant props await

reanimation; whilst mirrored front of house, we actors glimpse
our spectral viewers, props to our staged universe.

At Seventeen’ from ‘Between the Lines’ by Janis Ian, released 1975


iii.    Faust the Magician presents: The Girl Without a Middle, Sword Cabinet Illusion


Wanted: Assistant for world famous magician.
Must be biddable, willing to work in small spaces and have current passport. Experience unnecessary. Dancer preferred. Must provide own tights.
                                                          The Stage, 1978


The auditorium doors whoosh and click, like an intake of breath,
the smacking of lips, begins your journey to the land of Sleight of

Hand; my world, where brief life span’s of three-minute illusions
are circumscribed by black tape crosses, a designated spot, invisible

to audiences, each player knows their station. Each person, prop
seemingly randomly stowed, occupying that ordained position,

receiving brief moments under a dazzling electric sun.        Basking
centre-stage – ominously costumed as Fu Manchu – Faust the Magician, 

Master of Ceremonies, the named one, holds - spellbound -
the phantasmal faces beyond his stygian domain.

I make my entrance, his glittering assistant, Eve to his Adam
in a treeless dominion. I’m briefly named, quickly replaced,

forgotten. I am the costume, the flesh, his foil.    My role…
walk stage left,   I am spot-lit sparkle,  walk stage right

rotate           centre stage, to demonstrate       I’m whole.
Retreating, I stand within the cabinet. Receding into the gilt

and black lacquer, my casket, arms sacrificially crossed at my
chest. Kimono sleeves swishing decorously, he shuts the doors

leaving me         head and legs        exposed. Am I thinking? Breathing?  

He wields a sword,                    slices            a floating silk scarf
Drives the blade home         through           the cabinet’s side

Ritualised gestures,      pierces, daggers    beneath my smiles.
Ceremoniously rotates    the cabinet,        nothing behind.

With accomplished flourish, he swings the doors wide, reveals

the woman                                                  with no middle.

Can I be human at all?  I have a head, perhaps a brain; but observe
my inane grin, these blades for ribs! Can you be certain these are real legs? 

I’m hardly a woman, perhaps a rhinestone automaton. Obscured behind
my black false wall, subsumed into your perceptions of the magical.


iv. Mum and Me on N54 (All-Night-Bus) to Bellingham

How you’d laugh riding home, me in full slap, aping Faust, the Magician,
‘is Lancashire accent kep’ slippin’ out. There’s no smoke an’ mirrors, Mam,

tha’ knows’ ------ just contortions and negations behind black hyphens.


Friday, 29 April 2016

Spiders buying bicycles and sending saucy postcards.

Today was the last day of my course... at least as far as lessons to and fro and tutor marked assignments. I am now at the phase where I put everything together, decide which of the taught forms I want to submit my end-of-course assignments in and then get to work on producing it / them.

I have already decided that I'll be focussing on poetry - no surprises there - but what the focus of my efforts will be is still a matter of my ever-changing concerns. So while I'm dithering I've made another spine poem and mocked up an image to illustrate it - without strings of onions - and am now off to power walk my way around the town while I think.



another spine poem

      three sheets to the wind
      a spider bought a bicycle
      a breath of French air
      stopping places
      left bank
      French postcards













Three Sheets To The Wind, Pete Brown
A Spider Bought a Bicycle, Michael Rosen
Stopping Places, Simon Evans
Left Bank, Kate Muir
French Postcards, Jane Merchant

Tuesday, 19 April 2016

The Paper-Cut Poet


Today I made a series of amazingly simple poem and papercut collaborations.... I loved it!
So, as of today, I intend to further experiment with this interesting combination of outlets for my overbubbling of artistic interests.
I have opened up a separate blog page to store the images and words in the mean time and will see how it develops.
           
Cherry blossoms bubble
over jutting branches.
Blush burnished sunlight.

Today I started my new project called The Papercut Poet. It has been on the backburner for a few months as I'm creeping through the last few sections of my current Creative Writing course but finally I thought 'Why not? What am I waiting for?' And so I now have a fresh and fruity sister page for this one: http://thepapercutpoet.blogspot.co.uk 
On it, I'm able to post my more cutting (pun intended) paper related postings and will be updating this page with some of its content as and when it seems relevant. I've kicked things off with a new pet distraction - Book Spine Poetry! I guess it comes from hours gazing and ruminating over what to write, the best words for what I want to say, the best form to house or contain those words etc. etc. I find my eyes wandering to the bookshelves that surround my working space and the incredible titles that some of them have. I've often smiled at the juxtaposition of different titles and how they seemed to have connections but never knew this was an existing form of poetry. Who'd have thought it?
book-spine-poem.jpgSo here is a jpg of my first posting:

in the wolf's mouth
losing battles
the ringmaster's daughter
the whole woman
all passion spent
exquisite corpse