Day Seven. Special January Ekphrastic Challenge Jan 7th to February 6th. Please join writers Merril D Smith, Jim The Poet, Holly York, Michael Dickel, Joy Fleming, Hilary Otto, Godefroy Dronsart, Alan Gary Smith, Redcat, and myself as we respond to the remarkable art of Chris O’Connor, Marcel Herms and Kerfe Roig and others to arrive in the coming weeks. Wednesday.

January 13th

Hip priest, mixed media on riso print, 13 x 19,2 cm, 2020 MH13

-Marcel Herms “Hip Priest”

clarity_KR13

-Kerfe Roig “Clarity

CO13

-Christine O’Connor

MH13

Ice broke cracked open
snowy cold engulfed all life
tumbling upside down

KR13 Clarity

Time and space beneath the wisdom
Hades aflame unfeared, assault murders
rape continue, tender innocent bodies
abused, why? Deadly sins allover rage,
bird in anguish cries in captivity, trapped,
trying to escape to free skies, in vain,
ocean held like a gigantic bowl uncovered
holding life dead, drowned, floating
be wise be good be kind be understood.

CO13

I have no place to go, I am abandoned
I hide with nothing to hold or show
though the place is green, a wonderland
but where only there is a fall, no place for
the short or tall; gardens bloom odorless
bland and colorless, flowers grow down,
water flows upward and I cannot find the
way to peace, loneliness my partner now
forever is silent, locked down am I till
I die or breathless be like so many
the unseen killer may come and get me,
Ah the cruel corona covid virus.

-Anjum Wasim Dar

The urban garden and the I (CO13)

In these few square metres I make my den
I surround myself with all that is good
I bubble wrap my patch of calm
I hide it behind brick and smoked glass.
Inside, it is always blooming.
I become known for my garden,
it is transformed into an object of desire.
It is untouchable for those outside
I can see the faces peering in
I see jealousy in their eyes.
I burst a cherry tomato against my palette
I sip on a mojito made with fresh mint
I am cocooned in my greenery
I have achieved all that I wanted
I remember only vaguely why I did this
I am completely alone

-Hilary Otto

Clarity KR13

It’s that moment when the daylight gives,
when the owl raises careful silence
with the moon, spread circular, decisive
in his action. He sees all from the fence,
set apart, overlooking the valley.
He rises, pearly flare in the half light
focused on the point where two fields meet
three dimensions, feathers muffling his flight,
and then pulls back his head and drops feet first
straight on his mouse. Accuracy and stealth
give him an edge, but the skill that’s been rehearsed
and honed through centuries repeating death
is how to wait; the importance of surprise –
he knows how to choose the perfect time to rise.

-Hilary Otto

CO13

Twins

Amid the greenery, a crib.
Behind the layers, window panes.

Dreaming faces. One is pale,
worried, one darker, enclosed in a kiss.

A mouth, serious or suppressing
a smile. Two versions of the same.

Tender pink and blue, lace foliage.
Floating red balloons—ova?
Two with fetuses inside.

-Holly York

Clarity – KR13

The Sun shines, the Moon glows,
the owl more than knows.
The sky is clear, the water dear,
the understanding flows.

10,Ja,2021 for the thirteenth of.
-Alan Gary Smith, inspired by Paul Brookes and the painter Kiroji Roige.

Responding to KR, Clarity

Clarity

Coming home from the ER, I felt
a sense of clarity amidst the exhaustion,
and in the over-awakened midnight hour, an owl hooted
over and over again

calling for love, not warning,
I decided. And for love, we returned to the hospital
as the sun rose over the bridge to light the shadowed city streets.

Responding to CO 13

Unfinished

There are ghosts in the secret garden
drifting through the flowers’ birdwing-flutters,
she senses them, but they are masked, invisible
against the bright blooms, unfinished with this world,
outside of time, inside the walls, they wait.

-Merril D Smith

MH13

matador
his black arts of death
terminate in blood

-Jim The Poet

KR 13 (owl)

periscope shit
the sun is cooking guano
the seas fail to quench
-Jim The Poet

Bios And Links

-Kerfe Roig

A resident of New York City, Kerfe Roig enjoys transforming words and images into something new.  Her poetry and art have been featured online by Right Hand Pointing, Silver Birch Press, Yellow Chair Review, The song is…, Pure Haiku, Visual Verse, The Light Ekphrastic, Scribe Base, The Zen Space, and The Wild Word, and published in Ella@100, Incandescent Mind, Pea River Journal, Fiction International: Fool, Noctua Review, The Raw Art Review, and several Nature Inspired anthologies. Follow her explorations on her blogs, https://methodtwomadness.wordpress.com/  (which she does with her friend Nina), and https://kblog.blog/, and see more of her work on her website http://kerferoig.com/

-Christine O’Connor

is an artist working in glass, metal, fibre and paint. Sometimes her work is based on photographs, but more often, she creates in the moment. She loves to play with texture and colour.

-Marcel Herms

is a Dutch visual artist. He is also one of the two men behind the publishing house Petrichor. Freedom is very important in the visual work of Marcel Herms. In his paintings he can express who he really is in complete freedom. Without the social barriers of everyday life.
There is a strong relationship with music. Like music, Herms’ art is about autonomy, freedom, passion, color and rhythm. You can hear the rhythm of the colors, the rhythm of the brushstrokes, the raging cry of the pencil, the subtle melody of a collage. The figures in his paintings rotate around you in shock, they are heavily abstracted, making it unclear what they are doing. Sometimes they look like people, monsters, children or animals, or something in between. Sometimes they disappear to be replaced immediately or to take on a different guise. The paintings invite the viewer to join this journey. Free-spirited.

He collaborates with many different authors, poets, visual artists and audio artists from around the world and his work is published by many different publishers.

www.marcelherms.nl

www.uitgeverijpetrichor.nl

=Redcat

RedCat’s love for music and dance sings clearly in The Poet’s Symphony (Raw Earth Ink, 2020). Passion for rhythms and rhymes, syllabic feets and metres. All born out of childhood and adolescence spent reading, singing, dancing and acting.

Her writing spans love, life, mythology, environment, depression and surviving trauma.

Originally from the deep woods, this fiery redhead now makes home in Stockholm, Sweden, where you might normally run into her dancing the night away in one of the city’s techno clubs.

Read more at redcat.wordpress.com

-Merril D Smith

is a historian and poet. She lives in southern New Jersey, where she is inspired by her walks along the Delaware River. She’s the author of several books on history, gender, and sexuality. Her poetry has been published in journals and anthologies, including Black Bough Poetry, Nightingale and Sparrow, Anti-Heroin Chic, and Fevers of the Mind.

-Godefroy Dronsart

is a writer, teacher, and musician currently residing near Paris. His poetry has appeared in Lunar Poetry, PostBLANK, Paris Lit Up, The Belleville Park Pages, and Twin Pies Literary among others. His first chapbook, “The Manual” (Sweat Drenched Press, 2020), explores the space between poetry, prose, and gamebooks. He has a sweet tooth for all things experimental, modernist, and strange. Follow him on Twitter and his Bandcamp for electronic explorations.

-Joy Fleming

Born in County Down, Joy has studied, mothered and worked in Scotland since 1980. Brief excursions to follow her heart, back to NI mid-1990’s and England for first round Covid-lockdown ’19, Joy is currently back living in Glasgow. Joy’s first poem was accepted as part of the C. S. Lewis themed Poetry Jukebox curation A Deeper Country in Belfast in 2019. This poem, Ricochet was published in The Poets’ Republic Issue 8 Autumn 2020. A love of reading poetry is now accompanied by sporadic writing of poetic lines which spill out as an apparent by-product of processing dark and sorrowful days.   

-Holly York

lives in Atlanta, Georgia with her two large, frightening lapdogs. A PhD in French language and literature, she has retired from teaching French to university students, as well as from fierce competition in martial arts and distance running. She has produced the chapbooks Backwards Through the Rekroy Wen, Scapes, and Postcard Poetry 2020. When she isn’t hard at work writing poems in English, she might be found reading them in French to her long-suffering grandchildren, who don’t yet speak French.

-Alan Gary Smith

A Lincolnshire Ludensian living in Grimsby who built up his poetic stance after visiting Doncaster and Mexborough during his real ale and comedic music searches. Surprised to find a recent DNA check leaned heavily towards being a strong mix of Scottish, East Yorkshire and Lincolnshire. A sixty year old baldy who loves Julie, astronomy and chocolate; after giving up on football and telly.

-Hilary Otto

is an English poet based in Barcelona. Her work has featured in Popshot, Black Bough Poetry, AIOTB, Ink, Sweat and Tears, and The Blue Nib, among other publications. She received her first Pushcart Prize Nomination and performed at the Cheltenham Poetry Festival. She tweets at @hilaryotto

-Jim young

 is an old poet living in Mumbles on The Gower. He does most of his writing from his beach hut at Rotherslade – still waiting for the blue plaque

Anjum Wasim Dar was born in Srinagar (Indian Occupied )Kashmir, She is a migrant Pakistani.Educated at
St Anne’s Presentation Convent Rawalpindi she has a Masters degree  in English Literature and  History (
Ancient Indo-Pak  Elective) CPE Cert.of Proficiency in English from Cambridge
UK. , a Diploma in TEFL from AIOU Open Uni. Islamabad Pakistan. She has been writing poems,

 articles and stories since 1980.A published  poet Anjum was awarded  Poet of Merit Bronze Medal in  2000 by ISP International Society of Poets and poetry.com USA .

She has worked as Creative Writer at Channel 7 Adv. Company Islamabad, and as a Teacher Educator for  Fauji Foundation Education Network Inservice Teachers  

Educational Consultant by Profession. 

Author of 3 Adventure Novels (Series) Fiction..

Day Six: Special January Ekphrastic Challenge

merrildsmith's avatarYesterday and today: Merril's historical musings

It’s Day 6 of Paul Brookes’ Special January Ekphrastic Challenge. My poem today responds to all three works of art. If you click the link, you’ll see the poems by other poets. Some have written poems for each work of art.

Does What Happened by the Lake Stay There?

There we gathered
wishing for fish,
fishing for wishes
this is—

a dream, I say.

Here by this winter lake,
three versions all of me–

each facing in a different direction,
future, past, and present

in the distance, cradling,
hills indistinct, the haze surround us,

Am I awake or asleep? I see a huge blue tail.

How can this be? A whale.

Is this omen or vision, for the sinner that is me?

I feel sharp wolf claws upon my back,
and when I wake, I…

View original post 3 more words

Songs of the Sea – January Ekphrastic Challenge, January 12

RedCat's avatarThe world according to RedCat

Kerfe Roig – Blue Whale


The piston shrimps load snap
The stingrays electric zap
Such wonders beneath the sea
Wonders that will die out before all are seen

Moray eels in their holes
Fish dancing in big shoals
Who will translate their song
When the great whales are all gone

Corals in every rainbow bow hue
Flatfish waiting patiently for its due
Who will care about dolphin chatter
When money and power is all that matters

Shellfish doing the cleanup
Fluorescent yellow fish to sun up
From the sea came alive to this lands
Now it’s dying by humanity’s hands

Deep Sea creatures with their own light
Stingrays looking like flying kites
We have forgotten the seas bountiful gifts
How the Songs of the Sea our souls uplift

©RedCat


This blue whale painting by Kerfe Roig took my breath away. I fell deep in to the eye of the whale…

View original post 29 more words

Honoured and Delighted to have my seven poem sequence “Finding A Wonderland In Alice” feature in this kindle edition (Only £4.42) of “Fevers Of The Mind Poets of 2020”, a monster collection of poetry and interviews from all over the world by stonking talent. Thankyou, David.

Finding In Fevers

Day Six. Special January Ekphrastic Challenge Jan 7th to February 6th. Please join writers Merril D Smith, Jim The Poet, Holly York, Michael Dickel, Joy Fleming, Hilary Otto, Godefroy Dronsart, Alan Gary Smith, Redcat, and myself as we respond to the remarkable art of Chris O’Connor, Marcel Herms and Kerfe Roig and others to arrive in the coming weeks. Tuesday.

January 12th

CO12

=Christine O’Connor

blue whale_KR12

-Kerfe Roig “Blue Whale”

Het leven van een groot zondaar, mixed media on riso print, 14,6 x 16 cm, 2020 MC12

-Marcel Herms “Het leven van een groot zondaar”

CO 12

A Rainbow Waiting

What dost thou hope to find in the bosom of the sea
innocent souls seeking food in cool deeps, a single
line holding tight for life, lest it slip by with the pull,
grasp the rod with faith, and courage never to submit,
strong may be the forceful wind, threatening clouds
above, but a rainbow waiting behind unseen unknown.

Blue Whale
KR 12

Jail hours thirty six
mistake forgiven, freedom
a blessing divine.

MH 12

Fangs , snake, deception,
heaven lost, world chaotic
bloodshed, evil takes over.

-Anjum Wasim Dar

WHALE (After Blue Whale)

and O the lyrical body simple, deep
gliding curve of the mouth the eye
and the superimposed rise
of two opposite hills before
there were hills, wet
with the first of the first of the first
of the first of songs.

-Godefroy Dronsart

KR12

Blue Whale

Watercolor the color of water
the color of sky. Smiling, transparent,
partially submerged creature
needs both sea and air. Leviathan
coughed Jonah up then swam
through a pool of azure ink.
No Moby Dick here because
in watercolor whiteness is absence.

-Holly York

Blue Whale KR12
Inside a hangar of bone: your myth.
Your ribs raise an echoing vault,
your belly sets the stage for a tale.
All force and streamlined muscle,
your shadow patrols the submerged.
Your throat bears the pleats you save
for the scoop of your floating sieve.
How can we count the ocean
you contain in your bloated mouth
when it balloons to fit your bite?
For a time, your blubbery hide
was a paper lantern lit by its own fat,
and we burned it low. But you swam
your teardrop path to deep places
we couldn’t find, and there you blow.

-Hilary Otto

MH12

they let out the demon
by speaking falsehoods
bearing arms it roared
out of the cave and into the city
dragging a noose behind
in which jerked its old face
of respectability
until it became mute

-Hilary Otto

CO12

The reception round here is pretty bad
and my battery is getting low.
We’re deploying the camera now;
see what it can show.

Sorry ? No, rod isn’t a guy.
It’s a fishing rod with a minicam submersibubble.
What ? No, a submersible.
We shouldn’t be talking, I’ll get into trouble.

We’re looking for a body,
but our technique is a bit shoddy.
If we can’t see through this ice-cream
we’ll have to call the diving team.

I should be back for teatime, it’s too cold out here.
I’ll call in for a pizza and maybe get a beer.

10,Ja.2021 for the 12th of.
-Alan Gary Smith, inspired by Paul Brookes and painter Chris O`Connor.

KR12

song of the deep sea
booming in distant blues
why am i crying

-Jim The Poet

MH12

rage in the playground
a friend dowsing the flames
of his hidden pain

-Jim The Poet

Songs of the Sea

The piston shrimps load snap
The stingrays electric zap
Such wonders beneath the sea
Wonders that will die out before all are seen

Morenas in their holes
Fish dancing in big shoals
Who will translate their song
When the great whales are all gone

Corals in every rainbow bow hue
Flatfish waiting patiently for its due
Who will care about dolphin chatter
When money and power is all that matters

Shellfish doing the cleanup
Fluorescent yellow fish to sun up
From the sea came alive to this lands
Now it’s dying by humanity’s hands

Deep Sea creatures with their own light
Stingrays looking like flying kites
We have forgotten the seas bountiful gifts
How the Songs of the Sea our souls uplift

-©RedCat

A response to all three works of art.

Does What Happened by the Lake Stay There?

There we gathered
wishing for fish,
fishing for wishes
this is—

a dream, I say.

Here by this winter lake,
three versions all of me–

each facing in a different direction,
future, past, and present

in the distance, cradling,
hills indistinct, the haze surround us,

Am I awake or asleep? I see a huge blue tail.

How can this be? A whale.

Is this omen or vision, for the sinner that is me?

I feel sharp wolf claws upon my back,
and when I wake, I see their tracks.

-Merril D Smith

Bios And Links

-Kerfe Roig

A resident of New York City, Kerfe Roig enjoys transforming words and images into something new.  Her poetry and art have been featured online by Right Hand Pointing, Silver Birch Press, Yellow Chair Review, The song is…, Pure Haiku, Visual Verse, The Light Ekphrastic, Scribe Base, The Zen Space, and The Wild Word, and published in Ella@100, Incandescent Mind, Pea River Journal, Fiction International: Fool, Noctua Review, The Raw Art Review, and several Nature Inspired anthologies. Follow her explorations on her blogs, https://methodtwomadness.wordpress.com/  (which she does with her friend Nina), and https://kblog.blog/, and see more of her work on her website http://kerferoig.com/

-Christine O’Connor

is an artist working in glass, metal, fibre and paint. Sometimes her work is based on photographs, but more often, she creates in the moment. She loves to play with texture and colour.

-Marcel Herms

is a Dutch visual artist. He is also one of the two men behind the publishing house Petrichor. Freedom is very important in the visual work of Marcel Herms. In his paintings he can express who he really is in complete freedom. Without the social barriers of everyday life.
There is a strong relationship with music. Like music, Herms’ art is about autonomy, freedom, passion, color and rhythm. You can hear the rhythm of the colors, the rhythm of the brushstrokes, the raging cry of the pencil, the subtle melody of a collage. The figures in his paintings rotate around you in shock, they are heavily abstracted, making it unclear what they are doing. Sometimes they look like people, monsters, children or animals, or something in between. Sometimes they disappear to be replaced immediately or to take on a different guise. The paintings invite the viewer to join this journey. Free-spirited.

He collaborates with many different authors, poets, visual artists and audio artists from around the world and his work is published by many different publishers.

www.marcelherms.nl

www.uitgeverijpetrichor.nl

=Redcat

RedCat’s love for music and dance sings clearly in The Poet’s Symphony (Raw Earth Ink, 2020). Passion for rhythms and rhymes, syllabic feets and metres. All born out of childhood and adolescence spent reading, singing, dancing and acting.

Her writing spans love, life, mythology, environment, depression and surviving trauma.

Originally from the deep woods, this fiery redhead now makes home in Stockholm, Sweden, where you might normally run into her dancing the night away in one of the city’s techno clubs.

Read more at redcat.wordpress.com

-Merril D Smith

is a historian and poet. She lives in southern New Jersey, where she is inspired by her walks along the Delaware River. She’s the author of several books on history, gender, and sexuality. Her poetry has been published in journals and anthologies, including Black Bough Poetry, Nightingale and Sparrow, Anti-Heroin Chic, and Fevers of the Mind.

-Godefroy Dronsart

is a writer, teacher, and musician currently residing near Paris. His poetry has appeared in Lunar Poetry, PostBLANK, Paris Lit Up, The Belleville Park Pages, and Twin Pies Literary among others. His first chapbook, “The Manual” (Sweat Drenched Press, 2020), explores the space between poetry, prose, and gamebooks. He has a sweet tooth for all things experimental, modernist, and strange. Follow him on Twitter and his Bandcamp for electronic explorations.

-Joy Fleming

Born in County Down, Joy has studied, mothered and worked in Scotland since 1980. Brief excursions to follow her heart, back to NI mid-1990’s and England for first round Covid-lockdown ’19, Joy is currently back living in Glasgow. Joy’s first poem was accepted as part of the C. S. Lewis themed Poetry Jukebox curation A Deeper Country in Belfast in 2019. This poem, Ricochet was published in The Poets’ Republic Issue 8 Autumn 2020. A love of reading poetry is now accompanied by sporadic writing of poetic lines which spill out as an apparent by-product of processing dark and sorrowful days.   

-Holly York

lives in Atlanta, Georgia with her two large, frightening lapdogs. A PhD in French language and literature, she has retired from teaching French to university students, as well as from fierce competition in martial arts and distance running. She has produced the chapbooks Backwards Through the Rekroy Wen, Scapes, and Postcard Poetry 2020. When she isn’t hard at work writing poems in English, she might be found reading them in French to her long-suffering grandchildren, who don’t yet speak French.

-Alan Gary Smith

A Lincolnshire Ludensian living in Grimsby who built up his poetic stance after visiting Doncaster and Mexborough during his real ale and comedic music searches. Surprised to find a recent DNA check leaned heavily towards being a strong mix of Scottish, East Yorkshire and Lincolnshire. A sixty year old baldy who loves Julie, astronomy and chocolate; after giving up on football and telly.

-Hilary Otto

is an English poet based in Barcelona. Her work has featured in Popshot, Black Bough Poetry, AIOTB, Ink, Sweat and Tears, and The Blue Nib, among other publications. She received her first Pushcart Prize Nomination and performed at the Cheltenham Poetry Festival. She tweets at @hilaryotto

-Jim young

 is an old poet living in Mumbles on The Gower. He does most of his writing from his beach hut at Rotherslade – still waiting for the blue plaque

Anjum Wasim Dar was born in Srinagar (Indian Occupied )Kashmir, She is a migrant Pakistani.Educated at
St Anne’s Presentation Convent Rawalpindi she has a Masters degree  in English Literature and  History (
Ancient Indo-Pak  Elective) CPE Cert.of Proficiency in English from Cambridge
UK. , a Diploma in TEFL from AIOU Open Uni. Islamabad Pakistan. She has been writing poems,

 articles and stories since 1980.A published  poet Anjum was awarded  Poet of Merit Bronze Medal in  2000 by ISP International Society of Poets and poetry.com USA .

She has worked as Creative Writer at Channel 7 Adv. Company Islamabad, and as a Teacher Educator for  Fauji Foundation Education Network Inservice Teachers  

Educational Consultant by Profession. 

Author of 3 Adventure Novels (Series) Fiction..

Dabs of Color and Light

merrildsmith's avatarYesterday and today: Merril's historical musings

A frosty January morning.

The January sun is slow to rise
she shakes her flaxen head,
then dabs a bit of light—

there some color, bright
against grey, wheat, white,

the silvered-lawn sparkles–behold!

What’s to come? Black crow calls—more cold–
before summer blooms in colors bold.

A quadrille for dVerse, where De asks us to use some form of the word dab.

View original post

January Ekphrastic Challenge, Day 5

merrildsmith's avatarYesterday and today: Merril's historical musings

This is Day 5 of Paul Brookes’s Special January Ekphrastic Challenge. I misread Kerfe’s title as Beneath Cloud Wings, but that’s what they look like to me. 😀

Beneath Cloud Wings

Some hearts shatter–
their fragile shells swift-scatter
in the wind,

where owl-scoped and scooped,
the bleeding shards
are nested and guarded beneath cloud wings

to be reformed. Then re-hatched,
they flutter and fly,
soaring—knowing they may crash and crack again.

View original post

Day Five. Special January Ekphrastic Challenge Jan 7th to February 6th. Please join writers Merril D Smith, Jim The Poet, Holly York, Michael Dickel, Joy Fleming, Hilary Otto, Godefroy Dronsart, Alan Gary Smith, Redcat, and myself as we respond to the remarkable art of Chris O’Connor, Marcel Herms and Kerfe Roig and others to arrive in the coming weeks. Monday

January 11th

beneath cloud winds_KR11

-Kerfe Roig “Cloud Winds”

Het leven van een groot zondaar (genie), mixed media on paper, 14,6 x 21 cm, 2020 MH11

-Marcel Herms “Het Leven Een Groot Zondaar

CO11

-Christine O’Connor

Moon rise (CO11)

The moon rises over the red earth
red lips, red pleats, red stains.
It sheds a light on pattern and relief,
on stitch and pause. Now we can see
the gashes where the bark has split,
the raised details of repetition.
We can find the holes, and patch them.

-Hilary Otto

The life of a great sinner (MH11)

Even his pink shadow is trampled
by a great force riding over him
proclaiming that the truth is here.
His real face is concealed
behind a mask of grand ideas;
beneath a demeanour of certainty.
Pick up the words he dropped
during his advance and lob them
back, they will not burn your mouth.

-Hilary Otto

The challenge (KR11 )

The gap is too far to jump
a deep blue cut below the cliffs
not even the trees have made it
to the other side, barren and brown.

But the challenge is why I am here
I channel Philippe Petit
strung between twin towers
on a highwire, and fling my hook.

-Hilary Otto

JUXTAPOETICS

red
crush
shape
spread
line
horn
ink
point
wall
yes
urn
lime
curve
country
seed
prime

-Godefroy Dronsart

An Ocean

sails on the Roger Jolly
that lives on Captain Hook
and Smee. The crocodile is swallowed
by the clock who has had a hand
bitten off replaced by a hook.
Pan Peter teaches Wendy to walk,
a miracle as all fly all over the world.
She is not used to her heels
and toes touching earth.
The ocean and island of the Found Boys
live in the crocodiles stomach.
All live in the clock.

-Paul Brookes

KR 11

It must be the Bermuda

Triangle: the most coveted instrument
in the kindergarten rhythm band,
its silver isosceles chime was struck at just
the right time. Pythagoras had a lot to say
about them and their squared sides. Some
are romantic but there’s no fire here between
the female in blue and the male in green.
Earth wind and water join at the center, vortex
of calm. Inverted delta keeps their secrets.

-Holly York

Responding to Beneath Cloud Wings (KR) and CO11

Beneath Cloud Wings

Some hearts shatter–
their fragile shells swift-scatter
in the wind,

where owl-scoped and scooped,
the bleeding shards
are nested and guarded beneath cloud wings

to be reformed. Then re-hatched,
they flutter and fly,
soaring—knowing they may crash and crack again.

-Merril D Smith

Beneath Cloud Winds – KR11

Stop right where you are.
There is no beach down there
and you`re certainly not going to climb upon me.
Aren`t you the specimen that called me Elephant Rock ?
I shall take that as a compliment.
I hope it wasn`t derogat`ry.

I don`t want to hear your mopes.

I have been here millions of years before your kind.
I was here before the sea; licking away at me.
There was none of this greenery.
You can`t imagine that can you (?)

Glaciers have tried to break me
but they just fled by.
Your acid rains are mild to what the volcanoes threw at me.

I`ve known heat that would burn you to a cinder
and cold that prevented you from sprouting.
The sky was so much brighter before the stars moved away.

Anyhow, I`m Orme. What`s your name ?
Where have you gone ?
Strange, that…
the dinosaur didn`t hang around either.

8,Ja,2021 for the eleventh of.
-Alan Gary Smith, inspired by Paul Brookes and the painter Kiroji Roige.

MH11

lampooning
the drawing of the genie
child’s play

-Jim The Poet

KR11

summer in sunshine
rolling down to the seaside
anticipation

-Jim The Poet

Colours Beneath the Sky

Colours beneath the sky
In pale blue swallows fly
Sparkling mischievous eyes
Hawks soar with white wisps
The salty blue calm, no ships
Smiling strawberry red lips

Pink stars scatter the ground
Fragrant green all around
Sweet summer love found

To lay on heath is soft
Wind caresses, then is lost
Touch on skin lifts joy aloft

Blushing on milkwaite as she lay bare
Alluring like the day is fair
Dream that she would ever dare

-©RedCat

Bios And Links

-Kerfe Roig

A resident of New York City, Kerfe Roig enjoys transforming words and images into something new.  Her poetry and art have been featured online by Right Hand Pointing, Silver Birch Press, Yellow Chair Review, The song is…, Pure Haiku, Visual Verse, The Light Ekphrastic, Scribe Base, The Zen Space, and The Wild Word, and published in Ella@100, Incandescent Mind, Pea River Journal, Fiction International: Fool, Noctua Review, The Raw Art Review, and several Nature Inspired anthologies. Follow her explorations on her blogs, https://methodtwomadness.wordpress.com/  (which she does with her friend Nina), and https://kblog.blog/, and see more of her work on her website http://kerferoig.com/

-Christine O’Connor

is an artist working in glass, metal, fibre and paint. Sometimes her work is based on photographs, but more often, she creates in the moment. She loves to play with texture and colour.

-Marcel Herms

is a Dutch visual artist. He is also one of the two men behind the publishing house Petrichor. Freedom is very important in the visual work of Marcel Herms. In his paintings he can express who he really is in complete freedom. Without the social barriers of everyday life.
There is a strong relationship with music. Like music, Herms’ art is about autonomy, freedom, passion, color and rhythm. You can hear the rhythm of the colors, the rhythm of the brushstrokes, the raging cry of the pencil, the subtle melody of a collage. The figures in his paintings rotate around you in shock, they are heavily abstracted, making it unclear what they are doing. Sometimes they look like people, monsters, children or animals, or something in between. Sometimes they disappear to be replaced immediately or to take on a different guise. The paintings invite the viewer to join this journey. Free-spirited.

He collaborates with many different authors, poets, visual artists and audio artists from around the world and his work is published by many different publishers.

www.marcelherms.nl

www.uitgeverijpetrichor.nl

=Redcat

RedCat’s love for music and dance sings clearly in The Poet’s Symphony (Raw Earth Ink, 2020). Passion for rhythms and rhymes, syllabic feets and metres. All born out of childhood and adolescence spent reading, singing, dancing and acting.

Her writing spans love, life, mythology, environment, depression and surviving trauma.

Originally from the deep woods, this fiery redhead now makes home in Stockholm, Sweden, where you might normally run into her dancing the night away in one of the city’s techno clubs.

Read more at redcat.wordpress.com

-Merril D Smith

is a historian and poet. She lives in southern New Jersey, where she is inspired by her walks along the Delaware River. She’s the author of several books on history, gender, and sexuality. Her poetry has been published in journals and anthologies, including Black Bough Poetry, Nightingale and Sparrow, Anti-Heroin Chic, and Fevers of the Mind.

-Godefroy Dronsart

is a writer, teacher, and musician currently residing near Paris. His poetry has appeared in Lunar Poetry, PostBLANK, Paris Lit Up, The Belleville Park Pages, and Twin Pies Literary among others. His first chapbook, “The Manual” (Sweat Drenched Press, 2020), explores the space between poetry, prose, and gamebooks. He has a sweet tooth for all things experimental, modernist, and strange. Follow him on Twitter and his Bandcamp for electronic explorations.

-Joy Fleming

Born in County Down, Joy has studied, mothered and worked in Scotland since 1980. Brief excursions to follow her heart, back to NI mid-1990’s and England for first round Covid-lockdown ’19, Joy is currently back living in Glasgow. Joy’s first poem was accepted as part of the C. S. Lewis themed Poetry Jukebox curation A Deeper Country in Belfast in 2019. This poem, Ricochet was published in The Poets’ Republic Issue 8 Autumn 2020. A love of reading poetry is now accompanied by sporadic writing of poetic lines which spill out as an apparent by-product of processing dark and sorrowful days.   

-Holly York

lives in Atlanta, Georgia with her two large, frightening lapdogs. A PhD in French language and literature, she has retired from teaching French to university students, as well as from fierce competition in martial arts and distance running. She has produced the chapbooks Backwards Through the Rekroy Wen, Scapes, and Postcard Poetry 2020. When she isn’t hard at work writing poems in English, she might be found reading them in French to her long-suffering grandchildren, who don’t yet speak French.

-Alan Gary Smith

A Lincolnshire Ludensian living in Grimsby who built up his poetic stance after visiting Doncaster and Mexborough during his real ale and comedic music searches. Surprised to find a recent DNA check leaned heavily towards being a strong mix of Scottish, East Yorkshire and Lincolnshire. A sixty year old baldy who loves Julie, astronomy and chocolate; after giving up on football and telly.

-Hilary Otto

is an English poet based in Barcelona. Her work has featured in Popshot, Black Bough Poetry, AIOTB, Ink, Sweat and Tears, and The Blue Nib, among other publications. She received her first Pushcart Prize Nomination and performed at the Cheltenham Poetry Festival. She tweets at @hilaryotto

-Jim young

 is an old poet living in Mumbles on The Gower. He does most of his writing from his beach hut at Rotherslade – still waiting for the blue plaque

Ride, Trip, Life – January Ekphrastic Challenge, January 10

RedCat's avatarThe world according to RedCat

Marcel Herms – Heel het leven is een storm en een chaos der ziel


This ride will turn you round
Spin you round and round

Twist this way and that way
Confuse up and down until you sway

Like a reed in wind
As branches twinned in whirlwind

Stormy chaos reign
Soul drains as hot tears rain

The trip will demand red blood shed
Til the scythe severs your thread

©RedCat


To read the other poems for today go to Wombwell Rainbow.


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Introducing my Etsy Watercolours

Ashleigh Condon's avatarAs Told by Ashleigh

How has it been months since I’ve blogged?

I didn’t mean to leave it so long!

It’s just, well…WE FINALLY MOVED HOUSE! Yes, we did it! Honestly we got to a point where we thought our new house was a figment of our imaginations, because it just wasn’t happening. I was so convinced that even if it did happen, something awful would go wrong. But it didn’t; it went smoothly in fact. Both Mike and I adore our new house and honestly couldn’t be happier.

Obviously it’s been tough getting it sorted with the covid situation and being plunged into yet another lockdown , but I’ve managed to sort painters for our living room/dining room/sitting area (it’s a massive area) and I even painted my own bedroom (and roped Mike in to help me). I’ve sourced some amazing retro pieces (which you can see on my…

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