I’m taking poetic license on the definition of “date,” as I often do.
It is the same day from the time I wake up until I go to bed. So there.
This is a quick post, at least. I had this pairing in my mind for a
while because this is a picture that has remained with me since I took
it. For a little over ten years, I volunteered for the Bay State Equine Rescue.
It was a wonderful experience that gifted me with my own adopted horse,
Calico Silver. This picture far predates Calico, though, and comes
from my early years at the rescue. One morning, when I came in for my
volunteer shift, lo and behold, there were three new horses! It was an
Appaloosa family: a stallion (soon to be gelded), a mare, and their
baby! I happened to have my camera with me (well before camera phones
were a thing, so a miracle in and of itself!), so I snapped pictures.
And this picture of the stallion, Metro, was one that stayed in my mind
as striking with his expression and the wind in his hair. For the final
piece, I will likely use the black and white (which was quite some
stressful playing in PhotoShop since all my other photo editing has just
been on my phone, itself!), but I wanted to share all his gorgeousness
here!
The poem is also in its rough draft form, too. My aim is to compose the poems this month, and then go back and edit later.
Please do not share these photos; I am not finished and sharing them can hurt my future plans for this piece. Thank you!
Wednesday, April 3, 2019
National Poetry Month, April 2
Posted by Trisha Wooldridge 0 comments
Labels: Art, Bay State Equine Rescue, ekphrastic poetry, horse rescue, horses, national poetry month, poetry
Monday, April 1, 2019
National Poetry Month, April 1
For National Poetry Month, I decided to challenge myself with an ekphrastic poem every month.
What’s an ekphrastic poem? It’s a poem written about a picture or
work of art–or inspired by a picture / work of art–meant to expand upon
the meaning of the piece it’s in response to.
I’ve had the honor and privilege to be part of the Blackstone Valley Art Association‘s
Art-Poetry Pairing for the past three years, and I’ve loved working
with artists. This year, I participated as both artist and poet. You
can see this year’s parings at this link.
So, this year, I decided to celebrate National Poetry Month by doing
my own pairings of my hobby photos and poems. Some days the poem will be
the inspiration, other days the picture will be.
Today is my first full day home after attending Conbust, one of the
regular conventions I attend. It was amazing, as always, and it’s the
inspiration for this particular pairing. I had an idea of taking a
picture of my duffel bag spilled first and writing a poem about
recovery, about self-care and permission to recover–particularly after
several excellent panels discussing invisible disabilities and the
challenges of neurodiversity.
Instead, with the photo plan in mind, I wrote the poem first–a very
different poem than I planned–and then did the shoot, chose the
pictures, and edited them a little. The poem, however, is unedited and
will be edited. Most of my poems are handwritten first. So here are the
two pictures I am deciding between for the pairing and a photo of the
VERY ROUGH draft of the poem.
Please do not share these photos; I am not finished and sharing them can hurt my future plans for this piece. Thank you!
Posted by Trisha Wooldridge 0 comments
Labels: Art, Conventions, ekphrastic poetry, national poetry month, poetry, privilege