Full Description
The poems in Jennifer Atkinson's A Gray Realm the Ocean were all written under the influence of art-specifically twenty-and twenty-first-century abstract visual art. All the art referenced in the poems was done by women. Although many of these painters, sculptors, performance artists, ceramicists, and fabric artists have earned international reputations, albeit late in their lives or even after their deaths, most have only recently been given the notice and gallery space they deserve.
Composed in response to the artists' multiplicity of forms, styles, modes, and moods, the poems are variously experimental. Drunk on color and language, line and lines, they don't so much describe the art as revel in it. No patriarchal anxiety here—the poet actively seeks to join in conversation with the artists, listening closely and seeking their influence. She ponders, interrogates, and celebrates the work, taking each artist on her own term—respecting the achieved calm of Agnes Martin's "Night Sea" and the flare and smolder of Ana Mendieta's "earth-body" work, the lyric voluptuousness of Joan Mitchell and the intellectual geometries of Carmen Herrera, the arrested explosions of Cornelia Parker and Ruth Asawa's cool embodiments of shadow, the sun-drenched reveries of Emmi Whitehorse and Pat Steir's un-skied star falls. Yet A Gray Realm the Ocean not only seeks to honor these artists—their work, their courage, and their curiosity. Taken together, the collection is also a meditation on looking—conscious, attentive looking—and the mysterious nature of abstraction.
Contents
Foreword, by Patricia Spears Jones xi
Incognita 1
Spirit Level 3
"Night Sea" 4
Like Somewhere in Saskatchewan 5
She Would Not Say Her Work is the Work of Turning 7
"Lemon Tree" 8
"Milk River" 9
Sufficing 10
Abstraction 11
Reading Nautical Maps 12
"Mountains and Sea" 13
"The Bay" 15
'Womb-of-All, Home-of-All, Hearse-of-All Night' 17
A Clear Jar 18
White 19
"La Grande Vallée XIII" 21
"Sunflower III" 23
Sub-Linguistic Mumbling 24
Interior 1963 26
If 28
Cartography 30
Show Me an Angel 31
Star River Night 33
Alma Thomas's "Orion" Is 35
"Spiral Leap" 37
Motion and Cessation 38
At Sea 40
Night Forms 41
Night Vision 43
"Femme-Maison" 44
Irascible 46
The Wall 47
Fire 48
After the Burning of Flood Christian Church in Ferguson, MO: An Exploded View 49
The Melancholy of the Actual World 51
Why Seek the Dead Among the Living? 52
'It Remains to Be Seen' 53
Quick and Still 54
Seismography 56
The Coriolis Effect 58
"Uninvited Collaboration" 59
Afloat 60
Whole Cloth 61
"Cranoch Glen" 63
Looking 65
"Character Set" 67
The Provenance of Color 69
Black on Black 70
Sea and Grass 71
Afterword 72
Notes 75
Acknowledgments 81