Poetry as visual Art

Poetry as Visual Art


Whilst poetry has an aural tradition we also read it and look at it. Therefore you should consider the look of your poem as well as the way ut sounds. Poetry should be visual art as well as gaving musicality and flow. Therefore the poet needs to also consider the visual aspect of the poem.


Poetry is also a visual art and if the words of the poem are centred it can suggest a spine of ink down the centre of the page, with the white space encroaching on it.

Take this poem by Dennis O’Driscoll for example – the lines look as if they are stacked up in a precarious Jenga tower, which contributes to the poem’s theme:

Life

Life gives

us something

to live for:

we will do

whatever it takes

to make it last.

Kill in just wars

for its survival.

Wolf fast-food

during half-time breaks.

Wash down

chemical cocktails,

as prescribed.

Soak up

hospital radiation.

Prey on kidneys

at roadside pile-ups.

Take heart

from anything

that might

conceivably grant it

a new lease.

We would give

a right hand

to prolong it.

Cannot imagine

living without it.

Dennis O’Driscoll


Unfortunately internet sites often mean we lose deliberate formatting which loses us a dimension in our poems impact.


Here is a poem by Miroslav Holub as you will see it on most websites


Go and open the door.

Maybe outside there’s

a tree, or a wood,

a garden,

or a magic city.

Go and open the door.

Maybe a dog’s rummaging.

Maybe you’ll see a face,

or an eye,

or the picture

of a picture.

Go and open the door.

If there’s a fog

it will clear.

Go and open the door.

Even if there’s only

the darkness ticking,

even if there’s only

the hollow wind,

even if

nothing

is there,

go and open the door.

At least

there’ll be

a draught.


The Door

by Miroslav Holub


Shaped

Go and open the door.

Maybe outside there’s

a tree, or a wood,

a garden,

or a magic city.


Go and open the door.

Maybe a dog’s rummaging.

Maybe you’ll see a face,

or an eye,

or the picture

of a picture.


Go and open the door.

If there’s a fog

it will clear.


Go and open the door.

Even if there’s only

the darkness ticking,

even if there’s only

the hollow wind,

even if

nothing

is there,

go and open the door.


At least

there’ll be

a draught.


The Door

by Miroslav Holub


This is how it was designed to be read. It adds another dimension.


And if the poem is aligned to the right this might instil a sense of instability, with the reader casting their eyes about looking for the start of each line which is floating in space rather than aligned left, where we usually expect to find it when reading.

For example this unsettling poem by Sam Riviere is made more unsettling because of its layout:


Gothic Poem

wider than a library

& strewn with flyleaves

torn from 2nd-hand novels

a grave lays in a plot of sun

like an abandoned picnic

& somewhere nearby a green bonfire

in the background a maroon lawnmower rides onto the pavement


Compare it to this more traditional way of alignment:


Gothic Poem

wider than a library

& strewn with flyleaves

torn from 2nd-hand novels

a grave lays in a plot of sun

like an abandoned picnic

& somewhere nearby a green bonfire

in the background a maroon lawnmower rides onto the pavement


The imagery is still unsettling but the whole thing feels less jarring.


This is another dimension to consider in writing poetry in particular free verse, line length, line placement and use of white space. In addition to your imagery, words and metaphors.


© S. Beardon

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Published on March 23, 2018 01:41
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