September 24, 2020

Ekphrastic Challenge, August 2020: Editor’s Choice

 

Painting of armless Roman statue and a blue bowl on a pedestal

Image: “Blue Bowl” by Liz Magee. “A Duty to Look Beautiful” was written by Patty Holloway for Rattle’s Ekphrastic Challenge, August 2020, and selected as the Editor’s Choice.

[download: PDF / JPG]

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Patty Holloway

A DUTY TO LOOK BEAUTIFUL

Yes, armless is harmless. That’s how we want
our women to be. No attachments, free
from holding a job or babies they’ll flaunt,
free for only this life of luxury.
They’re really quite bright; they soon come to know
their only duty’s to look beautiful.
We take care of everything they need. So
they have no stress. We keep them moveable—
we put them in their place, and there they stay.
This one’s very fond of the blue glass bowl:
two vessels cracked though not in the same way,
but both denied the prize they long to hold:
Sweet water slips away from the basin.
No hand to hold for the lovely maiden.

from Ekphrastic Challenge
August 2020, Editor’s Choice

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Comment from the editor, Timothy Green: “Everyone loves a sonnet, apparently, and this is another great example of why. So much is packed into these fourteen lines, which arc perfectly into the surety of the final couplet. One of the main tasks of poetry—and all art, more generally—is to change the way you look at the world. After reading this piece of modern mythology, I’ll never look at ancient statues the same again.”

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September 17, 2020

Ekphrastic Challenge, August 2020: Artist’s Choice

 

Painting of armless Roman statue and a blue bowl on a pedestal

Image: “Blue Bowl” by Liz Magee. “Mantra” was written by Michael Harty for Rattle’s Ekphrastic Challenge, August 2020, and selected as the Artist’s Choice.

[download: PDF / JPG]

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Michael Harty

MANTRA

for Leonard Cohen, 1934–2016

A crack in everything, he told us—that’s
how light gets in. And yes, he always knew
that this included him. The sharps and flats
of life—he savored them and suffered through
them, shaped them to an art that calls the name
of every listener. The light that found
his inner world was like a healing flame:
revealing, not destroying, always bound
to show his truth. Lost loves, mistakes, regrets,
despair and fear, but hope as well, and praise,
and generosity, and tenderness—
all deeply shared, with ordinary grace.
A cracked bowl gathers light, a cracked bell rings,
and even facing night, a cracked voice sings.

from Ekphrastic Challenge
August 2020, Artist’s Choice

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Comment from the artist, Liz Magee: “This is the poem that I would like to have written, and the more I read it the better it sounds. I am biased toward short, direct poems that I do not have to work too hard to understand and which yet manage to set up a painting in themselves. If I did not know Leonard Cohen, I would know him from this poem. It suits the sonnet form so well, the rhymes are not intrusive, and the final couplet gave me a bit of a shiver! There were poems that looked more closely at the painting, but I liked the focusing on the small detail of the crack in the bowl and giving it a whole new meaning that I did not intend.”

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