Sunday, April 18, 2021

A Baker’s Dozen: Collages

A few collages. I’m not sure why I love this method of art so much, but I do. 


Once by the Sea (found and torn papers, acrylic paint, markers, pen, acrylic medium)
Early Winter (found and torn papers, watercolor, photographs, acrylic medium)

Dust of Snow (pan pastels, photographs, pencil, watercolor, paper) 

Sisters (handwritten journal, Stabilo pencil, acrylic paint, gesso, found and torn papers, markers, acrylic medium)

#19 (found and torn papers, gesso, acrylic paints, handwritten note, acrylic medium)

Winter Dusk (found and torn papers, acrylics, gesso, watercolor, photographs, acrylic medium)

Let Her Paint (found and torn papers, crossword page, Tombow Markers, gesso, watercolor, photographs, acrylic medium)

And Full of Sleep (found and torn papers, watercolor, acrylic, gesso, photographs, acrylic medium)

A Thousand Years of Dreaming (found and torn papers, watercolor, acrylics, gesso, photographs, acrylic medium)

Dreaming of Kurt Schwitters (found and torn papers, newspaper, acrylic, gesso, acrylic medium)

Notes Made Late Afternoon (found and torn papers, watercolor, pen, pencil, photographs, acrylic medium)

The Alphabet is No Language (found and torn papers, watercolor, acrylic, type, photographs, acrylic medium)

Christmas in Harlem (acrylic paints, roller, gesso, Photographs, acrylic medium)

#PoetryBreak: Farolitos

Contemplative (M.A. Reilly)



Farolitos

  - by Arthur Sze

    (from The New Yorker)



We pour sand into brown lunch bags, then place
            a votive candle


inside each; at night, lined along the driveway,
            the flickering lights


form a spirit way, but what spirit? what way?
            We sight the flames


and, swaying within, know the future's fathomless;
            we grieve, yearn, joy,


pinpoints in a greater darkness, and spy sunlight
            brighter craters


on a half-lit moon; in this life, you may try, try
            to light a match, fail,


fail again and again; yet, letting go, you strike
            a tip one more time


when it burst into flame--        now the flames
            are lights in bags again,


and we glimpse the willow tips clutch at a lunar
            promise of spring.










Saturday, April 17, 2021

Newark in Bloom

This past week I made a few images in Branch Brook Park of the cherry blossoms.  Below are some.


Blossom 2 (4.21, Newark, NJ)

Blossom 3 (4.21, Newark, NJ)

Cathedral (4.21, Newark, NJ)

Lake (4.21, Newark, NJ)

Grove (4.21, Newark, NJ)

Reflection in Lake (4.21, Newark, NJ)

Blossom (4.21, Newark, NJ)


Dangling (4.21, Newark, NJ)

Blossoms 2 (4.21, Newark, NJ)

Cherry Blossom Trees (4.21, Newark, NJ)

Sunlight (4.21, Newark, NJ)


Water Drop (4.21, Newark, NJ)

The Photographer (4.21, Newark, NJ)

Out Walking (4.21, Newark, NJ)

Blossoms on Branch (4.21, Newark, NJ)

Sunday, April 11, 2021

Poetry Break: Spring Storm by William Carlos Williams


Spring Thaw (M.A. Reilly, Ringwood, NJ)


Spring Storm


     - by William Carlos Williams


The sky has given over

its bitterness.

Out of the dark change

all day long

rain falls and falls

as if it would never end.

Still the snow keeps

its hold on the ground.

But water, water

from a thousand runnels!

It collects swiftly,

dappled with black

cuts a way for itself

through green ice in the gutters.

Drop after drop it falls

from the withered grass-stems

of the overhanging embankment.



Painting Creates Focused Energy

Making art helps me to keenly focus. Whether it is with a camera, a paintbrush, pencils, or digitally—I get lost in the work for hours. I need this. Here are a few recent works and some re”found” work. 


“Sisters” (gesso, acrylic, crayon, found papers, Stabilo pencils, white marker, 2021)



“Old Man” (acrylic paint, digital manipulation)



Untitled (watercolor, Stabilo pencil, found papers, crossword puzzle, tissue, digital manipulation, 2021)



Two pages in journal ( gesso, acrylic paint, 2021)



untitled (gesso, acrylic paste, Stabilo pencil)


“Dreaming of Kurt Schwitters” (collage, torn paper, acrylic, newspaper, found papers, digital manipulation) 


“Unmoored” (watercolor, marker, acrylic


Saturday, April 10, 2021

Poetry Break: Spring and All

Woods (M.A.Reilly)


Spring and All 

   -by William Carlos Williams 


I

By the road to the contagious hospital
under the surge of the blue
mottled clouds driven from the
northeast-a cold wind. Beyond, the
waste of broad, muddy fields
brown with dried weeds, standing and fallen

patches of standing water
the scattering of tall trees

All along the road the reddish
purplish, forked, upstanding, twiggy
stuff of bushes and small trees
with dead, brown leaves under them
leafless vines—

Lifeless in appearance, sluggish
dazed spring approaches—

They enter the new world naked,
cold, uncertain of all
save that they enter. All about them
the cold, familiar wind—

Now the grass, tomorrow
the stiff curl of wildcarrot leaf
One by one objects are defined—
It quickens: clarity, outline of leaf

But now the stark dignity of
entrance—Still, the profound change
has come upon them: rooted, they
grip down and begin to awaken


Care: Notes from the Pandemic

Aftermath (Paterson,NJ)

One small truth emerged these last 13 months  - art reminds me of how we are human, how we are in one another's care.  In the aftermath, what seems to matter is how we cared for one another during the crisis, the challenge, the sorrow, the stress. 

What truth, idea, thought has emerged for you? What joy, if any, emerged? 

Sunday, April 4, 2021

PoetryBreak: Easter Morning in Wales

 

Wales (M.A.Reilly, May, 2014)


EASTER MORNING IN WALES 

              — by David Whyte


A garden inside me, unknown, secret,

neglected for years,

the layers of its soil deep and thick,

trees in the corners with branching arms

and the tangled briars like broken nets.


Sunrise through the misted orchard,

morning sun turns silver on the pointed twigs,

I have woken from the sleep of ages and I am not sure

if I am really seeing, or dreaming,

or simply astonished

walking towards sunrise

to have stumbled into the garden

where the stone was rolled from the tomb of longing.



EASTER MORNING IN WALES

From RIVER FLOW: New and Selected Poems

© David Whyte and Many Rivers PressFrom ‘Time Left Alone’ 

In ‘River Flow: New and Selected Poems’

© David Whyte and Many Rivers Press

https://davidwhyte.com/collections/books-cards-and-audio/products/river-flow-new-selected-poems

Saturday, April 3, 2021

Poetry Break: Sisyphus and the Ants

 

Sisyphus (M.A.Reilly, Paterson, NJ)


Sisyphus and the Ants

The story tells us Sisyphus is being punished.
Over and over he has to push that boulder

up and up. The mountain and God glaring.
And you, you have

your avalanche of moods.
Pills the size of stars to nearly quell

cascade and tumult.
And still you step

gravity amplified by incline, each hazard
in the way of the boulder a reminder

it should be easier. There should be
a hot fudge sundae at the top. A long nap in the shade.

The story forgot to tell us, though, Sisyphus thrived.

He learned to guide his wrists
and shoulder girdles safely to protect himself.

And later he worked to safeguard every insect
from here to the crest. Considers this his calling.

Even as the sun and the weight of time bears down.
Your strength is kingly.

Source: Poetry (February 2019)