Friday, December 17, 2010

Charles Demuth




Self-Portrait (1907)


"Paintings must be looked at and looked at and looked at. . . . No writing, no talking, no singing, no dancing will explain them."





















American Artist


1883 - 1935










The Figure 5 In Gold (1928)

Inspired by a poem of

William Carlos Williams:

The Great Figure


One of the lessons I learned early in my career is not to explain my poetry to others.  If I had to explain it, then either I did not succeed or the reader failed to understand.  I would attend writer's groups where we would share our work and then the group would critique it.  Some writers would keep trying to explain their poems if they didn't feel the group grasped the meaning of the poem.  I think the same is true of any art form.  You don't need to explain your work.  A painter shouldn't explain the meaning of his painting.  The viewer has the responsibility in the communication exchange to study the work to the best of his ability just as the reader also has some responsibility.  It is a two way street.  

















The Great Figure


by William Carlos Williams





Among the rain


and lights


I saw the figure 5


in gold


on a red


firetruck


moving


tense


unheeded


to gong clangs


siren howls


and wheels rumbling


through the dark city.