COMBAT PAPER
ON THE COAST OF MAINE 2.
EARLY ROCK-BOUND BLUES
Almost the end of the first day . . .
should be a happy day,
twelfth anniversary and
beautiful, rock-bound coast . . .
I left my love in the lurch:
for the best of reasons, maybe . . .
to maybe make a difference
and make a new life . . .
but doing my duty seems
like summer vacation and
my aged soul's anguished
and lost and alone . . .
When I get back gotta get a job,
make some dough, make some bread,
take somethin' home to my wife
an keep on workin' till I'm dead . . .
AFTER THE SECOND DAY
(MANDATORY FUN DAY)
So we hiked the Great Head Trail
and plunged into the Atlantic at
Sand Beach, mixed copious sweat
and salt and sand, to look off
the edge of America to find,
on the side of a rocky slope with
the sea all around, that it was
Sarah's birthday: we proceeded
to act goofy, take pictures on
the edge of a cliff, and marvel,
what a cool place to be
on your birthday . . .
strenuous Tuesday:
turned to quiet time with
intermittent community reflection,
revelation and celebration,
Eli's chile and birthday cake
and mosquitos . . .
WORKING WANDERING WEDNESDAY
The beater in action and
outdoors, pulling sheets, including
a batch of Wayne Erb's 1950's green fatigues.
Pressing sheets under a truck tire
then loading the dry box: all
the nitty-gritty of papermaking.
Meanwhile, interviews have begun
for film/fundraising, who knows
what . . . I'm just an artist clueless
to fate, the possible, the inevitable . . .
Cooked dinner: maybe not
the worst burritos in the world,
but among friends who are both
kind and hungry . . .
Then to Bar Harbor:
for a meeting and ice cream
and a stroll with the tourists,
bought cigars and a root beer float . . .
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Thursday, August 22, 2013
COMBAT PAPER
ON THE COAST OF MAINE I.
This is the story of a week in Maine. Seven people
came together in a beautiful house overlooking the Narrows
between Trenton, Maine and Mount Desert Island. On the
tip of a peninsula, we gazed upon vistas of islands and headlands
and sky. Dead center, passage out to the Atlantic, nature beat all
around us and we gave ourselves up . . .
We came to make Combat Paper, to hone skills we'd learned
over the past year and a half. We were rededicating ourselves
to the task of Deconstruction: our military uniforms that we cut
to postage stamp-sized pieces. Then to Reclamation: into our beater,
our rag would be turned to pulp, to be pulled from water with
deckle and mold, formed into paper. For the purpose of
Communication: on that paper, we would tell our stories
in pictures, prints and words . . . we would make art.
A GIFT
What do I do with an
undeserved gift . . .?
Through my truck stop shades
the sky's as blue as robin's eggs
an' stretchin' from east to west . . .
big wide sky, with the sun, a bullet
burnin' way up straight over my head . . .
wide, deep lawn, bright green and
out beyond still waters, the Narrows,
between two bays, isles an' jutting
land between this deckside idyll
and the mightyAtlantic . . .
lookin' southeast towards
low peaks of Acadia National Park an'
listenin' west to the hollow thrum
of bullfrogs lolling in the pond . . .
FIRST WORKSHOP
I've always felt that creativity was the most
important thing in life. The making of art, which
I first learned from my mother, has been integral
to my survival.
As such, I've always loved the tools of art
whether pencils or pens, paints and pastels,
typewriters and notebooks and paper. Paper to
write on, to draw on, to paint on . . . and when
I first held a piece of Combat Paper in my hands,
I was overcome by the power and meaning .
Sometimes it blows my mind when I think . . .
once I was a Marine and I served in the Vietnam
War. As one who believes that art tells a truer
story than anything written or told by historian
or journalist, then Combat Paper is the perfect
medium for my story, for my artistic expression.
I have been given a gift, that if I wish to keep,
I must give away.
Monday, August 19, 2013
NOTE FROM N.M. WALT
"The First Animals", 1913,was one of Franz Marc's many luscious canvases
featuring his magnificent blue horses. These paintings, along with an earlier, much
less remarkable blue horse painting by Wassily Kandinsky, gave the name to the
journal and the artistic group known as the Blue Riders.
Despite Marc's progression into cubist and increasingly abstract forms, his vivid
palette and lush images are considered early manifestations of the Expressionist
movement that dominated German art following World War One.
In addition to Kandinsky, artists associated with the Blue Riders include Paul Klee,
the German-Americans Albert Bloch and Lyonel Feininger, the composer/artist
Arthur Schoenberg, the Russian grandniece of Alexander Pushkin, Natalia Goncharova.
Franz Marc's closest friend and Blue Rider artist, August Macke, was killed in action
in the Champagne sector of France, August, 1914. Marc was killed at Verdun in 1916.
"The First Animals", 1913,was one of Franz Marc's many luscious canvases
featuring his magnificent blue horses. These paintings, along with an earlier, much
less remarkable blue horse painting by Wassily Kandinsky, gave the name to the
journal and the artistic group known as the Blue Riders.
Despite Marc's progression into cubist and increasingly abstract forms, his vivid
palette and lush images are considered early manifestations of the Expressionist
movement that dominated German art following World War One.
In addition to Kandinsky, artists associated with the Blue Riders include Paul Klee,
the German-Americans Albert Bloch and Lyonel Feininger, the composer/artist
Arthur Schoenberg, the Russian grandniece of Alexander Pushkin, Natalia Goncharova.
Franz Marc's closest friend and Blue Rider artist, August Macke, was killed in action
in the Champagne sector of France, August, 1914. Marc was killed at Verdun in 1916.
BLUE RIDERS
For Auguste Macke and Franz Marc
On my desk, in the sun,
mess of papers, things undone,
not yet started, half begun,
an aged clock that doesn't run . . .
lost to who it is is me,
poet an' thinker of history,
adolescent man of mystery,
unfinished as I'm s'posed to be . . .
The papers are random, some related,
lists an' memos doomed, ill-fated,
Blick Art coupons, most outdated,
menu from a joint I hated . . .
an' on my desktop top position,
a picture from an exhibition,
an ad so bold in composition,
primitive, modern, world in transition . . .
Blue an' violet horses, 1913,
auburn colts, trees emerald green,
first animals livin' in a world that's clean,
in peace, in colors only the artist's seen.
Now the gallery's open, the show's begun,
'nother hundred years of art's been done,
since Macke an' Marc felt their last sun
over Champagne an' at Verdun . . .
On my desk, in the sun,
mess of papers, things half begun,
the gift of years not for everyone,
I lift my pen to the noble Hun . . .
For Auguste Macke and Franz Marc
On my desk, in the sun,
mess of papers, things undone,
not yet started, half begun,
an aged clock that doesn't run . . .
lost to who it is is me,
poet an' thinker of history,
adolescent man of mystery,
unfinished as I'm s'posed to be . . .
The papers are random, some related,
lists an' memos doomed, ill-fated,
Blick Art coupons, most outdated,
menu from a joint I hated . . .
an' on my desktop top position,
a picture from an exhibition,
an ad so bold in composition,
primitive, modern, world in transition . . .
Blue an' violet horses, 1913,
auburn colts, trees emerald green,
first animals livin' in a world that's clean,
in peace, in colors only the artist's seen.
Now the gallery's open, the show's begun,
'nother hundred years of art's been done,
since Macke an' Marc felt their last sun
over Champagne an' at Verdun . . .
On my desk, in the sun,
mess of papers, things half begun,
the gift of years not for everyone,
I lift my pen to the noble Hun . . .
Saturday, July 27, 2013
The Long and Winding Blog
Art and letters
War and peace:
the long and winding blog . . .
. . . in an age of specialization,
of blog specificity,
I will write of many things.
No fast and furious information,
I will write of solid things,
even if only ideas . . .
War and peace:
the long and winding blog . . .
. . . in an age of specialization,
of blog specificity,
I will write of many things.
No fast and furious information,
I will write of solid things,
even if only ideas . . .
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