Tuesday, February 12, 2008

After the Rain 3: Poems from the Paintings
of Lina Llaguno Ciani













Six Fifty-Nine PM, oil on canvas, 100x60cm
















Tree Tanaga #3


Grace visits us like moths and leaves,
The rain drumming on roof and eaves.
Always, God has something up His sleeve:
Mists and colors after nature grieves.


We come to one of the last of a series on that rare (for me and any other poet, I suppose) occasion when one is asked to write poems on somebody’s paintings and read the same during the art show opening itself. One is honored by the request from an artist who is—apologies for bringing this up—my senior in the craft, as well as in artistic experience. Indulge me some more, although a promise is a promise.

It has been an experience, as has been obvious the way I’ve narrated it in the last postings, the reading and writing. I was facing “real,” “live” and contemporary paintings by a living artist (different from our ekphrastic exercises on, say Luna, Hidalgo, Delacroix, or even the late lamented Santi Bose), as exciting, indeed, as when I first encountered Alfredo “Ding” Roces’ paintings on his blog and furiously tapping away at the keyboard, or when I saw Delotavo's huge canvas of the Filipino diaspora at a group exhibit. I was discovering a new territory, a “scaffolding,” as they say now, with which to build new poems, and a slightly different poetic. Ekphrasis, of course, had been invented or defined, by the Greeks, but doing it in our own contemporary time on the works of living artists, is another thing. Thanks and thanks again to Lina LLaguno Ciani and to Galleria Duemila and its owner Silvana Diaz, for welcoming me and my poetry into a live gallery (quite different from a color plate in an art book).

Why all this fuss about art and painting? (Of course we're always "fussing" about art, and if they’re like Ciani’s art, all the more.) Painting and poetry have always been called the sister arts in classicism. Horace said “ut pictura poesis,” as is painting so is poetry (which I’ve made into a motto of my other blog and ezine, poets’picturebook), and closer to home: I’ve always thought I’d be a painter when I was this big, before poetry seized me, and when I was gawking at my (late) eldest brother doing his boards of frames and talk balloons for the komiks (he was a paid dibuhista for some time). I drew and wrote my own comic books. I went from Superman and Batman and the Justice League to Sci-Fi and Heavy Metal and, well, I somehow gave up comic books for books, pictures for words, along the way, though not completely. It never stopped. I still stop at the new, pricey, and cultic comic book shops (or illustrated novels, as they call them now), I still gawk at art exhibits.

So, here they are. This may be the penultimate post of series, as I might have to reserve a long poem for a separate post (it needs some some work since there are lot of indentions among the the verse lines.) To remind readers, the first post on Ciani’s art was my own review of the show, the second a society page of sorts (beautiful people coming to the show and, in the process, listening to my poetry), and now, for my blog readers, esp. Bikolanos (because this is about us): with their respective paintings, the poems.








Eastern Wind,oil on canvas, 70x100cm









Blue


Across the grass nothing is blue,
Nothing and the feel of nothing,
The nothing we are brothers to,
That will slay us in our sleeping.


Cirilo F. Bautista

Desiring
God is transparent blue—the color

Which makes our souls visible.



Marjorie Evasco



Is this the river or the ocean?
Where is the garden?

Whose blue is this?
Not the fisherman’s blue
Where he casts his net
To haul in his blessings.

What blue is this?
Not the kingfisher’s blue
Whose wing is made of sky,
Not the soul’s blue
That makes him visible,
If God were looking.

Whose whites are these?
Where is the altar
That shall receive these
Votive stems, these
Unsullied petals?

There is only the blue
Of wind and dark water
Rising:

The ocean is a river,
There is no garden.











Tree#1, oil on canvas, 90x100cm











Tree Tanaga #1


In purple air everything swirls,
Life hangs or clings like eggs or pearls;
What wing or claw can brave the storm,
Man curls under roots: piteous worm.













After November,oil on canvas, 70x95cm





Apáy Leaf


There is a pool below
The leaf left by either flood

Or tears. Even in mud
It catches the limpid droplet

Become a gem as it slid
Down the leaf’s velvet skin.

Taste lingers: Noons of
Rice and coconut milk,

Tang of dried fish stirred
Into the thick stew of leaves,

And the sudden epiphany
Of spice on the tongue…

Beauty,
Bruised and smudged, still
Resides in the blood-caked

Sod mixed with sand
Left by the river choked

With boulders spilling down
The Volcano’s slope.

Life,
Shedding a pellucid tear,
Sprouts like a hear-shaped

Leaf.












Tree#2, oil on canvas, 90x100cm









Tree Tanagà #2


Stripped of bark, the old life lingers,
Its branches a-flutter with green.
The new one sleeps in its chamber,
And soon will wake to tangerine.


NOTES
Apáy. Taro, gabi, Colocasia esculenta
Tanagà. A traditional Tagalog verse form of four rhymed lines of seven or eight syllables each.

3 comments:

Marchiesal Bustamante said...

"In purple air everything swirls,
Life hangs or clings like eggs or pearls;
What wing or claw can brave the storm,
Man curls under roots: piteous worm."

Sir, this one is meditation at work, worms too are one of my favorite metaphors for man, and somehow this short poem is in constant weaving inside a cocoon. And yes, it's true, worms can brave the storm at that first flap of its wings.

I like the Apay leaf too, i like them all. :)

Thanks for the poems.

Marne L. Kilates said...

Hi Marchiesal!

Sorry I missed your comment because of my endless tinkering with the look of the blog. Thanks for the visit! And for liking the poems. You're even more right, worms can/must brave the storm at the first flap of their wings. Life continues!

Marne

Marchiesal Bustamante said...

Sir Marne,

It's okay, I like the new look, it compliments the ekphrasis with that white background hehe. I bought your book(Monsoon...) nga pala last last week, it's always a unique experience to read your poems. Thanks for the affirmation regarding the worms. :) We're all worms for Inspiration, especially the "bookworms" hehe. Life prevails indeed. There's always a new creature to transform into. Thanks.

marchiesal