Irene Latham's Blog, page 96
April 22, 2016
ARTSPEAK! 2016: Poem #22 "A Dream of Wheat"
Hello, and Happy Poetry Friday! Be sure to visit Jama's Alphabet Soup, where I am sure there will be some deliciousness waiting... there always is!)Here at Live Your Poem, it's day 22 of my National Poetry Month poem-a-day-project ARTSPEAK! in which I respond to images found in the online collections at the National Gallery of Art. Please join me, if you feel so inspired!
But first, please visit Radiant Robyn at Life on the Deckle Edge Edge to see how our Progressive Poem is progressing!
I am just back from a whirlwind trip to Texas Library Association (TLA) in Houston. Yes, we braved the rain to talk poetry! I'm so grateful to Boyds Mills Press for sending me to speak on Sylvia Vardell's annual Poetry Roundup panel, along with poets Kwame Alexander, David L. Harrison, K.A. Holt, Steve Swinburne, Janet Wong, & the one and only Amy Ludwig VanDerwater!
You can see more about this on Twitter: #txla16. I live-tweeted from a MG Fantasy panel -- still thinking about some of the things the panelists said! I promise to share more in May. ONE WEEK TO GO, friends!!
This year's ARTSPEAK! theme is "Plant. Grow Eat." It was inspired by the release of my latest book FRESH DELICIOUS: Poems from the Farmers' Market. Here are the poems so far:
"Fruit Jar" after Fruit Jar by J. Howard Iams
"Child in the Garden" after The Artist's Garden at Vetheuil by Claude Monet
"Math Lesson (from the Garden)" after Still Life with Lemons and Oranges wit Blue Gloves" by Vincent van Gogh
"Gardening Basics" after The Watering Can/Emblems: the Garden by Roger de La Fresnaye
"Mary in the Garden" after Reading in the Garden by Pompeo Mariani
"This Wheelbarrow" after A Woman Emptying a Wheelbarrow by Camille Pissarro
"A Dream of Sheep" after Warm Afternoon by Winslow Homer
"Harvest" after The Last Days of Harvest by Winslow Homer
"Anticipation (in the Garden) after George Moore in the Artist's Garden by Edouard Manet
"Gathering Fruit" after Gathering Fruit by Mary Cassatt
"Bread's Lament" after Boy with Basket of Fruit by an unknown American artist
"After the Fire" after Ruined Farm by Hubert Robert
"Cow at the Gate" after Landscape with Open Gate by Pieter Molijin
"I Am the Plate" after Still Life with Milk Jug and Fruit by Paul Cezanne
"Courtship (According to the Cat)" by Winslow Homer
"Courage" after Planting Corn by Stanley Mazur
"Orchard Barber Shop" after Gardener Pruning a Tree by Jacques Callot
"Gardener's Companion" after The Watering Can by Georges Seurat"Man, Reading" after Denoisel Reading in the Garden by James Tissot"At the Vegetable Market" after Vegetable Market at Pontoise by Camille Pissarro"Triolet for Planting Day" after The Artist's Garden at Eragny by Camille Pissarro
Today's poem is after a piece I adore. I've really enjoyed thinking about it: "Field of Green Wheat" by Vincent van Gogh. I ended up with another "dream" poem (last week was "A Dream of Sheep"). Isn't that interesting? I wanted to be sure and tuck some critters into this world of wheat... this is where I landed:
A Dream of Wheat
From a plainpacket of seeds
comes sun-sweetened stalks
seasoned by windand rain –
birds divingmice hiding
grasshoppers singingspiders weaving --
in a sea of wheat that will someday
become breadwe eat.
- Irene Latham
Listen to the poem on Soundcloud!
Published on April 22, 2016 03:30
April 21, 2016
ARTSPEAK! 2016: Poem #21 "Fruit Jar"
Hello, and welcome to day 21 of my National Poetry Month poem-a-day-project ARTSPEAK! in which I respond to images found in the online collections at the National Gallery of Art. Please join me, if you feel so inspired!But first, please visit Jan at Bookseedstudio to see how our Progressive Poem is progressing!
This year's ARTSPEAK! theme is "Plant. Grow Eat." It was inspired by the release of my latest book FRESH DELICIOUS: Poems from the Farmers' Market. Here are the poems so far:
"Child in the Garden" after The Artist's Garden at Vetheuil by Claude Monet
"Math Lesson (from the Garden)" after Still Life with Lemons and Oranges wit Blue Gloves" by Vincent van Gogh
"Gardening Basics" after The Watering Can/Emblems: the Garden by Roger de La Fresnaye
"Mary in the Garden" after Reading in the Garden by Pompeo Mariani
"This Wheelbarrow" after A Woman Emptying a Wheelbarrow by Camille Pissarro
"A Dream of Sheep" after Warm Afternoon by Winslow Homer
"Harvest" after The Last Days of Harvest by Winslow Homer
"Anticipation (in the Garden) after George Moore in the Artist's Garden by Edouard Manet
"Gathering Fruit" after Gathering Fruit by Mary Cassatt
"Bread's Lament" after Boy with Basket of Fruit by an unknown American artist
"After the Fire" after Ruined Farm by Hubert Robert
"Cow at the Gate" after Landscape with Open Gate by Pieter Molijin
"I Am the Plate" after Still Life with Milk Jug and Fruit by Paul Cezanne
"Courtship (According to the Cat)" by Winslow Homer
"Courage" after Planting Corn by Stanley Mazur
"Orchard Barber Shop" after Gardener Pruning a Tree by Jacques Callot
"Gardener's Companion" after The Watering Can by Georges Seurat"Man, Reading" after Denoisel Reading in the Garden by James Tissot"At the Vegetable Market" after Vegetable Market at Pontoise by Camille Pissarro"Triolet for Planting Day" after The Artist's Garden at Eragny by Camille Pissarro
Today's poem is such a simple, lovely image... "Fruit Jar" by J. Howard Iams. I decided my poem should be simple, too. And since today is also Spiritual Journey, Thursday, and the topic is REJUVENATION, I thought I'd try to incorporate that idea into today's poem.
The truth is, I'm in dire need of rejuvenation. It's been a busy season, full of wonderful things, but my most authentic self is far more solitary and private.
One thing that helps me during these busy seasons is to remember that it is indeed, just a season. Sometimes I can blow a thing up so big in my mind, and then, when I really look at it, it's not season, but 6 six weeks. And not even 6 solid weeks, but 5 trips. And when you add up all those days, it's actually less than two weeks!
The other thing that really helps me is to take care of myself each and every day – to make sure I take breaks and look at the sky and meditate and get good sleep. These moments help to rejuvenate me in small ways, while still allowing me to appreciate the experience of each day.
I'm so, so grateful to be invited to do the thing I love best – connect with readers. I don't want to X that out of my life, just because my most authentic self is far more solitary and private. I just need to keep being in touch with myself, and with the moment. AND, it's important for me to schedule major rejuvenations when possible! Which is why I am retreating with dear friends at the end of this month/first of May.
Fruit Jar
When winter comes
pull mefrom the shelf
popopen the top
and catcha sudden
breathof summer.
- Irene LathamListen to the poem on Soundcloud!
Published on April 21, 2016 03:30
April 20, 2016
ARTSPEAK! 2016: Poem #20 "Child in the Garden"
Hello, and welcome to day 20 of my National Poetry Month poem-a-day-project ARTSPEAK! in which I respond to images found in the online collections at the National Gallery of Art. Please join me, if you feel so inspired!But first, please visit Ruth at There is no such thing as a godforsaken town to see how our Progressive Poem is progressing!
This year's ARTSPEAK! theme is "Plant. Grow Eat." It was inspired by the release of my latest book FRESH DELICIOUS: Poems from the Farmers' Market. Here are the poems so far:
"Math Lesson (from the Garden)" after Still Life with Lemons and Oranges and Blue Gloves" by Vincent van Gogh
"Gardening Basics" after The Watering Can/Emblems: the Garden by Roger de La Fresnaye
"Mary in the Garden" after Reading in the Garden by Pompeo Mariani
"This Wheelbarrow" after A Woman Emptying a Wheelbarrow by Camille Pissarro
"A Dream of Sheep" after Warm Afternoon by Winslow Homer
"Harvest" after The Last Days of Harvest by Winslow Homer
"Anticipation (in the Garden) after George Moore in the Artist's Garden by Edouard Manet
"Gathering Fruit" after Gathering Fruit by Mary Cassatt
"Bread's Lament" after Boy with Basket of Fruit by an unknown American artist
"After the Fire" after Ruined Farm by Hubert Robert
"Cow at the Gate" after Landscape with Open Gate by Pieter Molijin
"I Am the Plate" after Still Life with Milk Jug and Fruit by Paul Cezanne
"Courtship (According to the Cat)" by Winslow Homer
"Courage" after Planting Corn by Stanley Mazur
"Orchard Barber Shop" after Gardener Pruning a Tree by Jacques Callot
"Gardener's Companion" after The Watering Can by Georges Seurat"Man, Reading" after Denoisel Reading in the Garden by James Tissot"At the Vegetable Market" after Vegetable Market at Pontoise by Camille Pissarro"Triolet for Planting Day" after The Artist's Garden at Eragny by Camille Pissarro
Today's poem is kind of mysterious to me... it was inspired by "The Artist's Garden at Vethuiel" by Claude Monet. There's a stanza there (about sky!) that I don't know where it came from, or what it means exactly... and it may need to be cut. But for now I've left it in there. A big part of what draws me to poetry is how it helps me discover things about MYSELF. I think these lines are a perfect example of the poem speaking to ME. I try to really slow down and pay attention when this happens. I can always edit (or expand!) later. Also, the "flower"? It's in honor of the skunk in the movie Bambi. :)
Child in the Garden
Sometimes Papacalls me Flower
but I am drabcompared to these sun-topped towers
that swoop and swayand rustle and droop –
all day they whisperto each other
while I walkunnoticedbeneath them.
I want to tell themthe sky isn't alwaysblue,
the same dirtthat cradles their rootssleeps betweenmy toes –
I have secrets, too.
- Irene Latham
Listen to the poem on Soundcloud!
Published on April 20, 2016 03:30
April 19, 2016
ARTSPEAK! 2016: Poem #19 "Math Lesson (from the Garden)"
Hello, and welcome to day 19 of my National Poetry Month poem-a-day-project ARTSPEAK! in which I respond to images found in the online collections at the National Gallery of Art. Please join me, if you feel so inspired!But first, please visit my partner-in-poetry Charles at Poetry Time to see how our Progressive Poem is progressing!
This year's ARTSPEAK! theme is "Plant. Grow Eat." It was inspired by the release of my latest book FRESH DELICIOUS: Poems from the Farmers' Market. Here are the poems so far:
"Gardening Basics" after The Watering Can/Emblems: the Garden by Roger de La Fresnaye
"Mary in the Garden" after Reading in the Garden by Pompeo Mariani
"This Wheelbarrow" after A Woman Emptying a Wheelbarrow by Camille Pissarro
"A Dream of Sheep" after Warm Afternoon by Winslow Homer
"Harvest" after The Last Days of Harvest by Winslow Homer
"Anticipation (in the Garden) after George Moore in the Artist's Garden by Edouard Manet
"Gathering Fruit" after Gathering Fruit by Mary Cassatt
"Bread's Lament" after Boy with Basket of Fruit by an unknown American artist
"After the Fire" after Ruined Farm by Hubert Robert
"Cow at the Gate" after Landscape with Open Gate by Pieter Molijin
"I Am the Plate" after Still Life with Milk Jug and Fruit by Paul Cezanne
"Courtship (According to the Cat)" by Winslow Homer
"Courage" after Planting Corn by Stanley Mazur
"Orchard Barber Shop" after Gardener Pruning a Tree by Jacques Callot
"Gardener's Companion" after The Watering Can by Georges Seurat"Man, Reading" after Denoisel Reading in the Garden by James Tissot"At the Vegetable Market" after Vegetable Market at Pontoise by Camille Pissarro"Triolet for Planting Day" after The Artist's Garden at Eragny by Camille Pissarro
Today's poem is after a van Gogh piece. I'm traveling (hello, Houston! hello, TLA!), so not a lot of time to devote... which brought me to a closer look at the painting itself. What's there? How many? That's how I arrived at a math poem of sorts.
Math Lesson (from the Garden)
It takes two blue gloves
plus one wickerbasket
to hold nine just-plucked
suns.
- Irene Latham
Listen to the poem on Soundcloud.
Published on April 19, 2016 03:30
April 18, 2016
ARTSPEAK! 2016: Poem #18 "Gardening Basics" & Our Progressive Poem!
Hello, and welcome to day 18 of my National Poetry Month poem-a-day-project ARTSPEAK! in which I respond to images found in the online collections at the National Gallery of Art. Please join me, if you feel so inspired!
But first, it's Progressive Poem time! I gotta say: I am really loving our poem this year! I appreciate how everyone has taken up the rhyme scheme challenge started by Laura and Joy... and how many have used previous lines and stanza structure to inform their own lines. I've also loved reading about efforts to make one's line a good jumping off spot for the next person. Such a kind, compassionate community of writers... I love it! We're really in a groove this year!
ETA: As for my line, we had a bit of a shake up! I started with "My heart speeds as I climb astride," as I thought our speaker was surely ready for some action after all this dreaming of action! But then Kim let me know somehow Violet's line got lost when Kim wrote her line... so we had to get Violet back in there, which shifted things! But not to worry: words are moveable, changeable, and that's a big part of the fun! No wrong answers here, and we're all accounted for. What will our speaker do now? I leave it for the next poet(s) to unravel. It's all yours, Charles!
A squall of hawk wings stirs the sky.A hummingbird holds and then hies.If I could fly, I'd choose to beSailing through a forest of poet-trees.
A cast of crabs engraves the sandDelighting a child's outstretched hand.If I could breathe under the sea,I'd dive, I'd dip, I'd dance with glee.
A clump of crocuses crave the sun.Kites soar while joyful dogs run.I sing to spring, to budding green,to all of life -seen and unseen.
Wee whispers drift from cloud to earand finally reach one divining seerwho looks up from her perch and beams --West Wind is dreaming May, it seems.
Golden wings open and gleamas I greet the prancing team.
-------------------------------------------And now for that other poetry project in my life this month. :) This year's ARTSPEAK! theme is "Plant. Grow Eat." It was inspired by the release of my latest book FRESH DELICIOUS: Poems from the Farmers' Market.
Here are the poems so far:
"Mary in the Garden" after Reading in the Garden by Pompeo Mariani
"This Wheelbarrow" after A Woman Emptying a Wheelbarrow by Camille Pissarro
"A Dream of Sheep" after Warm Afternoon by Winslow Homer
"Harvest" after The Last Days of Harvest by Winslow Homer
"Anticipation (in the Garden) after George Moore in the Artist's Garden by Edouard Manet
"Gathering Fruit" after Gathering Fruit by Mary Cassatt
"Bread's Lament" after Boy with Basket of Fruit by an unknown American artist
"After the Fire" after Ruined Farm by Hubert Robert
"Cow at the Gate" after Landscape with Open Gate by Pieter Molijin
"I Am the Plate" after Still Life with Milk Jug and Fruit by Paul Cezanne
"Courtship (According to the Cat)" by Winslow Homer
"Courage" after Planting Corn by Stanley Mazur
"Orchard Barber Shop" after Gardener Pruning a Tree by Jacques Callot
"Gardener's Companion" after The Watering Can by Georges Seurat"Man, Reading" after Denoisel Reading in the Garden by James Tissot"At the Vegetable Market" after Vegetable Market at Pontoise by Camille Pissarro"Triolet for Planting Day" after The Artist's Garden at Eragny by Camille Pissarro
I selected today's piece by Roger de La Fresnaye for it's wild depiction of all the garden tools. I approached the subject several ways before I decided that maybe the wildness of the garden was the thing I wanted to write about. We like to think we have so much to do with the success of a garden, and yes, our efforts can make a difference, but the biggest thing I've learned as a gardener is that you can't stop growth. You can do everything right, and given rain and sun, the garden will GROW, often out of control. The earth explodes, in spite of our best efforts. And isn't that the miracle?
Gardening Basics
Even withouttroweland scythe
the gardengets dressedin a fuzzy green vest
that soon pops
its buttons.
- Irene Latham
Listen to the poem on Soundcloud!
Published on April 18, 2016 03:30
April 17, 2016
ARTSPEAK! 2016: Poem #17 "Mary in the Garden"
Hello, and welcome to day 17 of my National Poetry Month poem-a-day-project ARTSPEAK! in which I respond to images found in the online collections at the National Gallery of Art. Please join me, if you feel so inspired!
Also, be sure and visit Kim at Flukeprints to see how our Progressive Poem is progressing!
This year's ARTSPEAK! theme is "Plant. Grow Eat." It was inspired by the release of my latest book FRESH DELICIOUS: Poems from the Farmers' Market.
Here are the poems so far:
"This Wheelbarrow" after A Woman Emptying a Wheelbarrow by Camille Pissarro
"A Dream of Sheep" after Warm Afternoon by Winslow Homer
"Harvest" after The Last Days of Harvest by Winslow Homer
"Anticipation (in the Garden) after George Moore in the Artist's Garden by Edouard Manet
"Gathering Fruit" after Gathering Fruit by Mary Cassatt
"Bread's Lament" after Boy with Basket of Fruit by an unknown American artist
"After the Fire" after Ruined Farm by Hubert Robert
"Cow at the Gate" after Landscape with Open Gate by Pieter Molijin
"I Am the Plate" after Still Life with Milk Jug and Fruit by Paul Cezanne
"Courtship (According to the Cat)" by Winslow Homer
"Courage" after Planting Corn by Stanley Mazur
"Orchard Barber Shop" after Gardener Pruning a Tree by Jacques Callot
"Gardener's Companion" after The Watering Can by Georges Seurat"Man, Reading" after Denoisel Reading in the Garden by James Tissot"At the Vegetable Market" after Vegetable Market at Pontoise by Camille Pissarro
"Triolet for Planting Day" after The Artist's Garden at Eragny by Camille Pissarro
I selected today's piece because it's an image of how I'd like to be spending my time in the garden. :) As I was thinking about what to write I had this memory of the first day of fifth grade. My teacher Mr. Mac read my name during roll call -- Mary Dykes -- yes, I am one of those who is called by my middle name! This has caused all sorts of confusion over the years, and I don't recommend it. So Mr. Mac said, "are you Mary Had a Little Lamb" or "Mary Quite Contrary" ? I said, "I'm Irene." :) So, obviously, sometimes, a bit of real life creeps into these poems when I am least expecting it.
Mary in the Garden
When I'm contraryI grab a bookand sit awhilein the garden.
While I feast on words,the plants grow greenand greener.
Some storiesare essential as rain,and oh,how they sustain me!
- Irene Latham
Listen to the poem on Soundcloud!
Published on April 17, 2016 05:00
April 16, 2016
ARTSPEAK! 2016: Poem #16 "This Wheelbarrow"
Hello, and welcome to day 16 of my National Poetry Month poem-a-day-project ARTSPEAK! in which I respond to images found in the online collections at the National Gallery of Art. Please join me, if you feel so inspired!Also, be sure and visit Violet Nesdoly to see how our Progressive Poem is progressing!
This year's ARTSPEAK! theme is "Plant. Grow Eat." It was inspired by the release of my latest book FRESH DELICIOUS: Poems from the Farmers' Market.
Here are the poems so far:
"A Dream of Sheep" after Warm Afternoon by Winslow Homer
"Harvest" after The Last Days of Harvest by Winslow Homer
"Anticipation (in the Garden) after George Moore in the Artist's Garden by Edouard Manet
"Gathering Fruit" after Gathering Fruit by Mary Cassatt
"Bread's Lament" after Boy with Basket of Fruit by an unknown American artist
"After the Fire" after Ruined Farm by Hubert Robert
"Cow at the Gate" after Landscape with Open Gate by Pieter Molijin
"I Am the Plate" after Still Life with Milk Jug and Fruit by Paul Cezanne
"Courtship (According to the Cat)" by Winslow Homer
"Courage" after Planting Corn by Stanley Mazur
"Orchard Barber Shop" after Gardener Pruning a Tree by Jacques Callot
"Gardener's Companion" after The Watering Can by Georges Seurat"Man, Reading" after Denoisel Reading in the Garden by James Tissot"At the Vegetable Market" after Vegetable Market at Pontoise by Camille Pissarro"Triolet for Planting Day" after The Artist's Garden at Eragny by Camille Pissarro
I selected today's piece because it made me think of that famous Red Wheelbarrow. What new could I say about a wheelbarrow? I don't know, but there's something so empowering about a woman in the garden, using the tools to work the land... so my poem kind of turned into an empowerment piece.
This Wheelbarrow
It could be any color,this wheelbarrowthat rolls with meacross the morningsof whack and weedand shuck.
Sometimes we bothget stuck –I blow the hairout of my eyesand we sit together for a whileunder the hickory tree.
Soon a breeze liftsmy bonnetand the wheelsshift once again,each squeal and groanan affirmation:
you can do it,yes, you can.
- Irene Latham
Listen to the poem on Soundcloud!
Published on April 16, 2016 05:00
April 15, 2016
ARTSPEAK! 2016: Poem #15 " A Dream of Sheep" & a Visit from J. Patrick Lewis
Hello, and Happy Poetry Friday! Woohooo, we're halfway there!!!Be sure to visit Michelle at Today's Little Ditty for Roundup. AND... welcome to day 15 of my National Poetry Month poem-a-day-project ARTSPEAK! in which I respond to images found in the online collections at the National Gallery of Art. Please join me, if you feel so inspired! I'm so pleased to have J. Patrick Lewis as my guest today -- he's written a poem inspired by this piece:
The Sleeping Gypsy by Henri RousseauBut first, please visit Matt at Radio, Rhythm and Rhyme to see how our Progressive Poem is progressing!Okay, now for Pat's poem:
The Sleeping Gypsy
Surprised by Moon, but at his ease,
The imperturbable lion seesA water jar, a mandolin,The wooden woman in her skin.
He does not put on brute display
His fascination for the preyThat other nights on other dunes
Ruthlessly reddens other moons.
He must be fed but must be full;No doubt his appetite is dullFrom ravaging the wicked partOf his corrupted lionheart.
Whatever reasons there may beFor this pastoral scenery,Midnight capitulates to dawn.The lion lingers . . . and moves on.
- J. Patrick Lewis
As I told Pat: so glad that lion moved on! Could have been an entirely different poem. :) Thank you, Pat, for sharing!
This year's ARTSPEAK! theme is "Plant. Grow Eat." It was inspired by the release of my latest book FRESH DELICIOUS: Poems from the Farmers' Market -- which was featured yesterday in Paste Magazine as one of 7 Farm-to-Table picture books. Yay!
Here are the poems so far:
"Harvest" after The Last Days of Harvest by Winslow Homer
"Anticipation (in the Garden) after George Moore in the Artist's Garden by Edouard Manet
"Gathering Fruit" after Gathering Fruit by Mary Cassatt
"Bread's Lament" after Boy with Basket of Fruit by an unknown American artist
"After the Fire" after Ruined Farm by Hubert Robert
"Cow at the Gate" after Landscape with Open Gate by Pieter Molijin
"I Am the Plate" after Still Life with Milk Jug and Fruit by Paul Cezanne
"Courtship (According to the Cat)" by Winslow Homer
"Courage" after Planting Corn by Stanley Mazur
"Orchard Barber Shop" after Gardener Pruning a Tree by Jacques Callot
"Gardener's Companion" after The Watering Can by Georges Seurat"Man, Reading" after Denoisel Reading in the Garden by James Tissot"At the Vegetable Market" after Vegetable Market at Pontoise by Camille Pissarro"Triolet for Planting Day" after The Artist's Garden at Eragny by Camille Pissarro
Today's piece is inspired by Pat's piece... instead of lion, lamb! Warm Afternoon by Winslow Homer. I guess I am sort of stretching the theme yet again... but that's part of the fun! (And yes, there is a typo in the graphic -- and no time to fix it. Alas. I know my Poetry Friday friends will be forgiving. :)
A Dream of Sheep
Sometimes I thinka sheep
has the lifemeant for me:
how untroubled the days
in the shade of this old tree.
I like their woolly coats,the way they bleat
and how they eatwhenever they please.
Yes, I should have beena sheep.
But then who –or what –
would have been me?
- Irene Latham
Listen to the poem on Soundcloud!
Published on April 15, 2016 03:30
April 14, 2016
ARTSPEAK! 2016: Poem #14 "Harvest"
Welcome to day 14 of my National Poetry Month poem-a-day-project ARTSPEAK! in which I respond to images found in the online collections at the National Gallery of Art.
Please join me, if you feel so inspired!
But first, please visit Jone at DeoWriter to see how our Progressive Poem is progressing!
This year's ARTSPEAK! theme is "Plant. Grow Eat." It was inspired by the release of my latest book FRESH DELICIOUS: Poems from the Farmers' Market.
Here are the poems so far:
"Anticipation (in the Garden) after George Moore in the Artist's Garden by Edouard Manet
"Gathering Fruit" after Gathering Fruit by Mary Cassatt
"Bread's Lament" after Boy with Basket of Fruit by an unknown American artist
"After the Fire" after Ruined Farm by Hubert Robert
"Cow at the Gate" after Landscape with Open Gate by Pieter Molijin
"I Am the Plate" after Still Life with Milk Jug and Fruit by Paul Cezanne
"Courtship (According to the Cat)" by Winslow Homer
"Courage" after Planting Corn by Stanley Mazur
"Orchard Barber Shop" after Gardener Pruning a Tree by Jacques Callot
"Gardener's Companion" after The Watering Can by Georges Seurat"Man, Reading" after Denoisel Reading in the Garden by James Tissot"At the Vegetable Market" after Vegetable Market at Pontoise by Camille Pissarro"Triolet for Planting Day" after The Artist's Garden at Eragny by Camille Pissarro
I selected today's piece The Last Days of Harvest by Winslow Homer because it's what our gentleman in yesterday's poem was yearning for.... the fruits of labor! But it isn't that simple, is it? The harvest takes work, too, as these boys are well aware.
Harvest
While our fatherspluck pumpkins
we shuckand shuckand shuck.
With a littleluckwe'll be donein timefor lunch.
Meanwhilethe corn sings:
rustle, crinkle,crunch.
- Irene Latham
Listen to the poem on Soundcloud.
Published on April 14, 2016 03:30
April 13, 2016
ARTSPEAK! 2016: Poem #13 "Anticipation (in the Garden)"
Welcome to day 13 of my National Poetry Month poem-a-day-project ARTSPEAK! in which I respond to images found in the online collections at the National Gallery of Art.
Please join me, if you feel so inspired!
But first, please visit Linda at TeacherDance to see how our Progressive Poem is progressing!
This year's ARTSPEAK! theme is "Plant. Grow Eat." It was inspired by the release of my latest book FRESH DELICIOUS: Poems from the Farmers' Market.
Here are the poems so far:
"Gathering Fruit" after Gathering Fruit by Mary Cassatt
"Bread's Lament" after Boy with Basket of Fruit by an unknown American artist
"After the Fire" after Ruined Farm by Hubert Robert
"Cow at the Gate" after Landscape with Open Gate by Pieter Molijin
"I Am the Plate" after Still Life with Milk Jug and Fruit by Paul Cezanne
"Courtship (According to the Cat)" by Winslow Homer
"Courage" after Planting Corn by Stanley Mazur
"Orchard Barber Shop" after Gardener Pruning a Tree by Jacques Callot
"Gardener's Companion" after The Watering Can by Georges Seurat"Man, Reading" after Denoisel Reading in the Garden by James Tissot"At the Vegetable Market" after Vegetable Market at Pontoise by Camille Pissarro"Triolet for Planting Day" after The Artist's Garden at Eragny by Camille Pissarro
Today's poem is another love poem of sorts. I wasn't sure what exactly to do with George Moore in the Artist's Garden by Eduoard Manet, so I gave him some feelings. About the garden. :) He looks like a nice enough fellow, doesn't he?
Anticipation (in the Garden)
The seeds are in,the sun beams down
rain has pitter-patteredthe gentle mounds –
and still no vines,no cascading flowers.
When, oh whenwill the leaves unfurl?
When will the tiny fruitsdrape like pearls?
Not now, not yet.Soon:
my garden may be shy,but I am a patient suitor.
- Irene Latham
Listen to the poem on Soundcloud!
Published on April 13, 2016 03:30


