La Rou de la fortune Erik Volet

The Human world intersects with those of animals, plants and the spirit world which is gestured towards. There are also beings halfway between these worlds—transitional beings with the ability to move through these different worlds with ease. Multiple time periods intersect & the world of myth and the past blends with the present-day time of contemporary reality.

Erik Volet

Reclining nude

Beggars Banquet

Woman in Blue Shawl and Poet’s Dream

Language of the Birds

Erik Volet (b. 1980) is a painter & illustrator from Canada who has exhibited in Canada, the US & Europe. As well as producing paintings he has published art books, made zines, illustrated books, and maintained a consistent involvement with painting murals on the street and in the public sphere. Influences, which continue to be important to his art practice are comic book art, graffiti, hip hop culture as well as surrealist theory and practice.

ERIK VOLET

Piebald Pandora and the Phantom Self

Piebald Pandora

Multi hued Glory

Sloth Shark face

Palomino woman bites us

and hangs with us

upside down at dawn

selling our souls to 4 legged

Majesty Lemurs on Madagascar….

(C) April 8, 2023 Written By Richard Gessner

Richard Gessner’s fiction has been published in Air Fish: an anthology of speculative work, Rampike, Ice River, Coe Review, Another Chicago Magazine, Happy, The Act, Sein und Werden, Skidrow Penthouse, The Pannus Index, Fiction International and many other magazines. A collection, Excerpts from the Diary of a Neanderthal Dilettante & The Man in the Couch was published by Bomb Shelter Props. Gessner’s drawings and paintings have appeared in Raw Vision, Courier News, Asbury Park Press, Rampike, Skidrow Penthouse, and exhibited at Pleiades Gallery, Hamilton Street Gallery, Cry Baby Gallery, The Court Gallery and the Donald B. Palmer Museum. Richard wrote The Conduit and Other Visionary Tales of Morphing Whimsy. He lives in Montclair, New Jersey.

The Conduit and Other Visionary Tales of Morphing Whimsy Audible

self fee of a phantom self. oil/collage Mitchell Pluto

Afterword

We believe we are conscious but we are continuously unconscious.

The eye is the window to the brain and there sits the optic chiasm. A cross current chessboard of visual information. In ancient China, King Wen changed three lines into six lines to form 64 hexagrams in his book called The Book of Changes. Ironically there are 64 arrangements in DNA and 64 squares on the chessboard.

Synchronicity?

Jesus, all the time I spent believing in a historical Laoz and come to find out there’s no historical race either.

these our the last days of being a primate. Don’t worry we still have cuspids

Everything must be uploaded|  

…creating a record print of a finger swipe from phone screen| CHECK

…the gesticulation wavelengths of our voice from phone calls| CHECK

…iris scan captured from viewing screen| CHECK

tell us what’s on your mind| CHECK

This device and artificial Intelligence will marginalize the future of man’s ego. After all man is an animal guided by objects, why not be a primate whose experience is organized and interrupted by the phone?

isn’t it working already?

Who is on the other side of the screen?

A narcissistic shark that feeds remotely on a colony of brains and uses the appearance of a woman as a lure

Now A Word From Our Sponsor

We would like to salute our patron Walt and his 1958 Disney film White Wilderness who graciously staged and contrived the impression of a massive lemming suicide. Now back to our show.

(C) April 8, 2023 written by Mitchell Pluto

I would like to thank my friend, Richard Gessner for collaborating and creating some writing to interpret my painting

Ibou Ndoye My Paint Brush is a Walking Stick

MY PAINTINGS ARE 100% SOCIAL, IN THE SENSE
THAT THEY HAVE SOCIAL FUNCTIONS WHICH
ALLOW THE VIEWER TO DEAL WITH ALL THE SOCIAL
ETHICS OF MODERN AND TRADITIONAL LIFE.
THEY ARE THE SHORT STORIES FROM ORAL
TRADITIONS THAT TEACH, INFORM, AWAKE AND
COMMUNICATE WITH YOUR SUBCONSCIOUS.
IBOU NDOYE

All Glass paintings are done on found windows. Please Click Image to Enlarge

Born in West Africa’s most progressive capital city, Dakar, Senegal, glass-painting
artist Ibrahima Ndoye has combined modernism and traditionalism to create a style
unique to himself. Ibrahima, commonly known as “Ibou,” grew up as the oldest
child of a family of four boys in the suburbs of Dakar. Ibou’s mother made her living
as a dressmaker while his grandmother worked as a tie-dye artist. Regularly
surrounded by colorful African textiles and fabrics, it is not surprising that Ibou says
he “socialized with art and cohabited with colors” from a very young age.

Ibou began his career as a painter in the late 1980s during a period in Senegal
called the “Set Setal,” or clean-up movement. The movement encouraged artists to
embellish the environment by expressing themselves through murals on buildings
and walls
. It was during this time that Ibou painted several murals in the suburban
city of Pikine. Some of Ibou’s murals were selected to appear in a French-produced
documentary in 1990.

Eventually Ibou’s interests changed. Following a tradition brought from the Middle
East to Senegal one hundred years prior, Ibou entered and renovated the world of
glass painting. When the technique was first introduced to the Senegalese, the
subject matter was predominated by religious scenes- i.e. Abraham’s sacrifice,
Noah’s Ark, Mary and Jesus. It wasn’t until after Senegal gained its independence
from its French colonizers (1960) that glass painting expanded in new directions.
However, through the 1980s only those holding degrees in fine art dared to play
with the century-old tradition. These initial innovators tended to create images in
such a way that the traditional style was barely recognizable through their
abstractions.

It was in the early 90s that a third wave of glass painters surfaced in Dakar. People
like Ibou began to look back at the traditional style of their predecessors with a new
inspiration. Instead of painting traditional African scenes on clean sheets of
regularly shaped glass, Ibou started breaking and layering the glass to create new
textures and effects. The incorporation of various other materials including copper
wire, broken bottles, wood, bone, and animal skin began to appear in Ibou’s work
as well. Later in his life, upon relocating to America, Ibou took one step further by
mixing glass with plastics and other materials common to our modern environment.
It is not unusual to find Ibou stapling scraps of soda cans and detergent boxes onto
vibrantly painted CD cases portraying images of African women carrying jugs of
water above their heads. As the times changed, so did Ibou’s work, creating a new
style from an old tradition.

In the late 90s Ibou began exhibiting his work around Africa and Europe in local
and internationally touring shows. The Biannual of African Art hosted in Dakar
regularly accepts Ibou’s work for exhibition in a show titled “The Salon of Glass
Painting.” In 1999 Ibou expanded his involvement in Senegal’s art scene when he
started running glass painting workshops at the El Hadji Doudou Mbath Primary
School, and later at the Dakar YMCA.

In 2001 Ibou found himself on his way to join a friend in New England. For several
months Ibou taught painting classes at Allen Special Needs Camp for the disabled
in Bedford, New Hampshire. Later that year Ibou moved to Rhode Island where he
acted as an art instructor for a program entitled “Kids at Risk” run by the Urban
Collaborative Accelerated Program (UCAP). Ibou also appeared as a guest speaker
on the Cox Television production “Cultural Tapestry.”

Now Ibou resides in Jersey City, New Jersey, and regularly exhibits his art both
locally and internationally in addition to holding glass painting workshops at
libraries and schools. Ibou intends to continue promoting and expanding his artistic
vision through exhibition, education and cultural exchange.

Jaclyn Pedalino African Art Manager

When i paint i become blind and turn my painting brushes into walking stick ,then fumble until i reach where i want to be

Ibou Ibrahima Ndoye e-mail; Ibouart@gmail.com www.iboundoye.com

Featured photo: Pipe Smokers

 Art and Beadwork by Salisha Anne Old Bull

When I was a little kid my first years were spent with my mom and dad until they parted ways when I was in kindergarten. Before that, I remember my mom walked a lot because we didn’t have a car. My last memory of my dad’s work was he was a taxi-cab driver in Billings, MT. I was their only child and spent a lot of time with my mom, dad, and paternal grandparents. My dad would sketch a lot and my grandfather would do Absaaloke (Crow) art by making artifacts he could sell throughout his travels in Montana and Wyoming. Art was always a part of my family’s life in some form.

Qwasqwi, Storm, Five Friends & the Canoe (2021). 7.7″ x 1′ 7″. Red vintage true-cut, size 13 seed beads, true-cut, size 13 seed beads, deer hide, wood, cotton fabric, wool, leather, stabilizer, czech beads, nylon and cotton thread, brass tacks and spots. The first cradleboard in a series of four cradleboards, representing the four seasons. This board represents the winter season. Award: 63rd Annual Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair & Market: 1st place award in Division D-Functional objects such as bows and arrows, cradleboards, bows, weapons, shields, furniture, lamps, musical instruments, bull roarers, beaded bottles, and other objects. Exhibition: “Expressions of Resilience” at Bigfork Arts & Cultural Center showing May 8-June 26, 2021. Exhibition: “Finding Our Place: Beading and Weaving Our Culture Together” at City Scape Community Art Space, in North Vancouver BC, Oct. 8-Nov. 13, 2021. Awards 2022: Harrison Eiteljorg Purchase Award, Best of Division in Traditional Beadwork (Eiteljorg Museum), First Place in Traditional Beadwork (Eiteljorg Museum). This cradleboard is in the permanent collection of the Eiteljorg Museum.

When my mom and dad broke up, I moved with my mom to Salish country in Western Montana. For the first few years, we lived with my uncle Johnny Arlee, my aunt Joan, and my maternal grandmother Rachel Arlee Bowers. All three were prolific in their Indigenous skillsets. At the time, my uncle had his own painting business and was always out in his shop making large hand-painted signs. My aunt Joan was always doing beadwork or sewing and my grandmother did beadwork and taught at the local tribal college; her beadwork. She was also a great seamstress. Earlier than I can remember, my mom would send me with my grandmother Rachel often and she was always toting her beading supplies and beaded creations to sell.

Salish Bitterroot Story (2022), 7.7″ x 1′ 7″. Combination of vintage and contemporary size 13 seed beads, true-cut, deer hide, wood, cotton fabric, wool, leather, stabilizer, Czech beads, nylon and cotton thread, brass tacks and spots. The second cradleboard in a series of four cradleboards, representing the four seasons. This board represents the spring season. Shown at the 64th Annual Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair & Market Award 2022: Second Place in Traditional Beadwork (Eiteljorg Museum). This work is now owned by a private collector.

There were times we camped at Agne’s Camp, in Valley Creek, and she would spend summers with Agnes, helping to pass on the Salish culture. I don’t remember the earlier years but as I got older the summer was cut down to a week and my grandma would be there every year, camping out, teaching the tribal college students how to bead. I looked forward to that time and I would help her get her camp set up and do small chores so she could work. She would teach me how to bead too and I remember my first finished beadwork was a little clip-on barrette I wore with my dance regalia when I was in about 4th grade.

Felicite McDonald
Digital Photograph
2021

By the time I was in high school I knew I wanted to practice art as a profession. I loved to draw and sketched on everything I was allowed to personalize. I wanted to know how to paint and I took every art class that was offered as an elective. I loved color theory and all of the challenges and assignments given to produce art. I wanted to go to art school but as I got older high school had a lot of social challenges for me; for a lot of different reasons; mainly adolescence and social factors. I was fast tracked through high school and when it came time to apply for colleges my mom didn’t agree that art would be the best declaration to pursue. I was so heart-broken but I minded and I ended up doing a lot of other things in college. I was never really satisfied with my majors, and mostly resentful of the ease that came to my classmates when they were following their career passions. I tried to stick it out as long as I could, which felt like my whole life.

Remember That Night At Buffalo Camp (2022). 7.7″ x 1′ 7″. Red and Green vintage true-cut, size 13 seed beads, true-cut, size 13 seed beads, deer hide, wood, cotton fabric, wool, leather, stabilizer, czech beads, nylon and cotton thread, brass tacks and spots. The third cradleboard in a series of four cradleboards, representing the four seasons. This board represents the summer season. Award: 100th Annual Santa Fe Indian Market: 2nd place award in Classification VIII: Beadwork & Quillwork, Div. C: Other items, Category 3102. This cradleboard is apart of a private collection.

I feel that I’ve had a very hard adult life and I’ve somehow managed to take the road less travelled. Like everyone who takes this path, I would say I wouldn’t change my outcomes, but I get a lump in my throat thinking about everything I’ve endured to get to where I am today. I married at age 20 to a Salish man, since I had spent most of my life in Salish country. He had three daughters from a previous marriage that I helped raise. We had two sons of our own who are still young enough to be in elementary school. I used my college degrees to stay near home, in Arlee MT, but I couldn’t handle the local, you-need-to-grow-a-thicker-skin attitudes of home. I’m pretty sure I suffered from PTSD from working in a hostile working environment.

Bitterroot & Huckleberries (2021). 8.5″ x 11″ beadwork surface, not including fringe length. Combination of modern and vintage size 13 true-cut seed beads, stabilizer, deer hide, wool, cotton fabric, nylon thread, czech beads, brass bells, one plastic button. Technique is flat-stitch, two-needle, contour beadwork. Exhibition: Knowledge from Land (2021), University Center Gallery, Missoula MT Award: 100th Annual Santa Fe Indian Market: 2nd place award in Classification VII: Diverse Art Forms, Div. A: Functional objects, Category 2707. This purse is apart of a private collection

One day, I had enough. My youngest daughter was in her last year of high school and she was exploring colleges to attend. We went to a college visit with her in the spring and we sat in on the art major session. I remembered my existing broken heart from not being able to pursue art as a young adult. When I got back to work, I had a really bad day and decided enough was enough. I found out the University of Montana was beginning its first cohort of online art degree program majors and I enrolled. I took as many classes as I could handle, quit my job and got a different job. I worked full-time and took online classes until eventually I finished the program in 2021 and I finally got an art degree. I don’t think I’ve ever cried so much, throughout those few years, realizing that I should have put my foot down and did art school from the start.

The Roses We Know (2023). 13″ x 6-3/16″ x .25″. Technique is flat-stitch, two-needle, beadwork. Materials are true cut, size 13 Czech modern and vintage seed beads, brain-tanned smoked deer hide, glass and crystal beads, nylon cord, stabilizer, thread, and cotton material. This purse shows the images of wild roses that grow in Western Montana. The plant is significant to the Bitterroot Salish people as the blooming represents the buffalo are fat and ready to hunt. It is currently in a virtual exhibit, “Stories From Bead Night,” hosted by Carrie McCleary and her Plain Soul beading group, Rock Your Beads at rockyourbeads.com. This purse now belongs to a private collector.

Towards the end of my degree program, I was finally able to do more extensive exploration into art that I was hoping to strongly focus. I was sad that I didn’t know much about being a professional artist so I soaked up any advice I could along the way—I’m still a beginner. I wanted to continue to do beadwork and also was very happy to get a formal educational background on art history. It helped me to better understand genres of the artworld as well as where I found interest. It turned out that all of my time before art school was not wasted. I used a lot of my educational background to express my interest in the type of art I like to create.

Salish Bitterroot Back Bag (2022). 6in. x 6 in., Size 13 true cut Czech beads (combination of modern and vintage). Brain-tanned, smoked, deer hide, nylon thread, stabilizer, and paper. This bag is in the permanent collection of the Montana Museum of Arts and Culture.

I like to focus on Indigenous knowledge and I like the idea of using empowerment to overcome systemic and racial oppression. The environment is most interesting and I try to express ecological concepts in my work, especially the beadwork. I enjoy lots of aspects of my culture, but feel that getting a formal education gave me a leg-up in life and it opened doors for me when I least expected it. Throughout my educational experience, I connected the idea of place-based learning and Indigenous ways of knowing. I believe that when a person is aware of their environment they can grow intellectually and pursue life beyond their basic needs—they are grounded and secure.

Susan At Thunderhead (2021). 12″ x 16″ original photograph and beadwork on canvas. Donated to Open Air for fundraiser.

Although beadwork is my go-to creative expression, I enjoy painting, drawing, and I aspire to improve my photography skills; I sometimes attempt to mix these medias. The past few years I’ve checked off some huge bucket list items, the biggest one being to participate in the Santa Fe Indian Market. Since 2021 I’ve found joy in participating in Indian Markets and learning how to make time to produce smaller items to vend during the market. It’s intense and physically challenging but I enjoy meeting Indigenous artists I’ve admired for years and having the honor of having artworks amongst the “greats.”

Indigenous Bitterroot Land
25” x 18”, Collage and beadwork on canvas
2021


In the future, I hope to calm down a bit and get a better handle of the business end of things. I hope to continue to grow artistically, continue to create art in a cultural sense, and to continue to support my family in this way. At the end of 2021 my husband got a new job and we moved part-time away from Arlee. But when that happened, we agreed that I would give it 100% to pursing professional art full-time. I’ve been doing this and slowly learning how to network and become more knowledgeable about the financial part of the deal. I’m thankful for my husband’s support of my journey and attribute his support to much of my ability to follow-through with life, up to this point. I’m also very thankful for the chance of being born into a family that valued art as a way of life.

Indigenous Hillshade (2020). 24″ x 36″ acrylic on canvas. Shown in the “We are Still Here and this is Our Story” exhibition in the Emerson Center for the Arts & Culture in Bozeman, Montana
.

I know that I cannot change the past but if I had to give a small bit of advice, I would say that dreams are always worth pursuing. Hard work, consistency, belief in yourself seem to be at the core of carrying a dream. I’ve wanted to give it up a few times, but I stop and remember things I’ve heard other artists say, such as having hard times and easy times along the way. I know that if I can live a life that I didn’t want for so many years, I can definitely commit to a life I really want and do my best to be accountable to myself and to my children. I love creating art and I’m certain this is how I will live the rest of my life.

written by ©Salisha Anne Old Bull

John Pelko on Florals
Hard sketch crayon on heavy gift-wrapping paper
12 in. x 14 in.
2019

SALISHA ANNE OLD BULL ART, PHOTOS AND WRITING IS AN AUTHORIZED DUPLICATION WITH PERMISSION AND EXPRESSED CONSENT

Feature photo: Signs of Autumn (2023). 7.7″ x 1′ 7″. Vintage and modern true-cut, size 13 seed beads, deer hide, wood, cotton fabric, wool, leather, stabilizer, glass beads, nylon and cotton thread, brass tacks and spots. The fourth cradleboard in a series of four cradleboards, representing the four seasons. This board represents the autumn season. Award: 65th Annual Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair & Market: Honorable Mention award in Division D-Functional objects such as bows and arrows, cradleboards, bows, weapons, shields, furniture, lamps, musical instruments, bull roarers, beaded bottles, and other objects. This work is now owned by a private collector.

Oracle Painting by Sarah Whitmire

I believe that I died when I was a child. Or perhaps a part of me died and something different was brought back. After that, things were not the same for me. I had several more brushes with death and suffering moving forward. These experiences shaped who I would become. They taught me about the uncertainty and duality of life and also brought me to a fierce inward state of being.

Decisive Action

I grew up in a world of adults. I was told that children were to be seen and not heard. I was given long stretches of time to play on my own. I turned to art and creative pursuits as a way to escape into the worlds I preferred to create. I built elaborate doll houses and loved magical wilderness spaces. I was inspired by the world of Fae that Brain Froud so beautifully captured. I was fortunate that my mother took me to art museums where I fell in love immediately with the language of art.

Transform

I believe that art has the power to heal, inspire and awaken; it has saved my life more times than I can count. As an adult, I have been lucky to keep my curiosity and magic alive. I pride myself on growth and becoming more and more who I prefer to be. I have now trained for over a decade in mystic and spiritual disciplines with the mission to inspire the world with my connection to what I call the Muse.

Allies

When I paint, I am moved by intuitive Muse forces from moment-to-moment, making marks with a variety of implements from my hands to brushes and handmade tools. I create from an empty meditative space, not knowing what will come out. There’s a huge amount of surrendering as I have to allow things to be as they are. Ugly or beautiful… I have to release all judgement. It’s one of the hardest things I do. It feels very vulnerable for me to allow “what is” when people are watching. And that is part of my work.

Glamour

What comes next often depends on the energy in a place, or time, or the viewers themselves who I feel pull the work through me. Over a period of 6-12 hours, sharp images, texts, and shapes are revealed as profound messages. Through abstraction, the art becomes the Oracle and represents the literal and metaphorical power of transformation. My art is in a constant state of service.

I Surrender All

The method I use requires a forgiving material like acrylic paint that permits rapid revisions. I think of my work as evolving in the moment.

Weight of Heart

Some parts gets covered up and pushed back and others change and are pulled forward. The pieces tell their own narrative as they become deeper with layers and more defined. I work on large 6 foot x 4 foot pieces of birch and frequently layer with colored pencil, watercolors, oil pastels, pouring paint, acrylic ink, China marker and more.

Gallery

When the pieces are ready we work hard to meticulously scan them at high resolution and make them into Oracle cards. I have always believed that these images are for others and sharing them is important as meaning makers for others. I release new each series of cards as they become available. Currently series 1 + 2 are available and I am painting pieces that will become Series 3 + 4 now.

I have performed this oracle painting performance every week at festivals, clubs and events, and online for the past 6 years. I believe the true magic is that these pieces are not only for viewing but can also be experienced. I invite you to journey with me as I discover the messages the Divine Muse will uncover next!

written by ©Sarah Whitmire

You can find me and my social media links at whitmireart.com

Brian J. McVeigh Decluttering My Mental Space

Decluttering My Mental Space

Collected Poems with Commentary

Brian J. McVeigh

My first encounter with haiku was not out of a love for poetry; rather it came from an educational motive. Many years ago, I was tasked with teaching Japanese students English. This was a bit of a challenge as the students had been taught what is pejoratively called the “grammar translation method” (emphasizing grammar rules; memorizing words as if each one only had a singular definition; focusing on error avoidance; rote exercises; testing for “only one correct answer”). Such a pedagogical approach not only instilled a fear of making mistakes but socialized students to see language learning as a terribly unimaginative enterprise. In an attempt to wean students off such a view, I had them translate Japanese haiku into English and English haiku into Japanese, hoping to impress upon them the inherent creativeness and flexibility of language. Most appreciated the purpose of utilizing haiku, though a few objected, apparently more comfortable with the unnaturalness and rigidities of textbook tutelage.
I also relied on haiku for another reason related to education that is a bit more involved. As I explain below, in one section of Interpreting Japan: Approaches and Applications for the Classroom (2014) I analyzed the aesthetics of haiku in order to show how ideas are built through sensory experiences. Haiku rely on perceptual immediacy to highlight an intuitive insight, thereby succinctly crystallizing a point. As such, they illustrate a crucial aspect about how human cognition operates and symbolic thought is created, i.e., the complex interplay between perception and conception. In other words, like other artistic expressions, haiku demonstrate how corporeal experiences facilitate looking at the world from a different angle, and sometimes that novel perspective possesses intellectual import.

The Body in the Mind
How do we come to believe or feel that something is true? To a large degree people are persuaded through aesthetics, and an appreciation of aesthetics emerges from bodily experiences and perception. Aesthetics is deeply implicated in what we think, how we interpret the social and natural environment, and the very words we use to communicate complex thoughts; this even includes super-abstract mental terms describing subjective introspectable self-awareness (i.e., consciousness as defined by the psychologist Julian Jaynes). In other words, the ideological and imaginary are grounded in physiology and embodied experiences.
We can categorize psychophysiological processes into sensate and ideational processes. The former has to do with what is seen, heard, felt, smelled, or tasted. It is the objective, perceptible world that comes to us through our senses. While the sensate is the experiential, the ideational refers to the conceptual; this form of knowing is not directly perceived through the senses (it is reasonable, of course, to argue that emotions are “felt,” and certainly strong affect is a physiological as well as a cognitive experience).
The sensate and ideational become linked in an individual’s psyche and mutually work together. We might say that the body is good with which to think. Sensate experiences are transformed into the ideational dimension, which in turn implicate different aspects of our corporeality: bodily parts (e.g., the belief that one’s personal essence is in one’s heart or head); spatial orientation or how the body is positioned in relation to objects and others (e.g., the universal assumption that what is up is always superior to what is below); interoceptive or internal sensations (experiences used to construct mental words as theorized by Julian Jaynes).
The relationship between the sensate and nonsensate is complex, but if simply stated, it may be viewed in the form of a two-tiered structure, with nonsensate knowledge generated from the senses. Perceptual experiences are borrowed to build nonsensate knowledge. Our mental worlds are based on the interchange of qualities of the corporeal and the cultural. Bodily experiences and the qualities of concrete things, then, become associated with belief. We do not and cannot just “think;” we can only think “of,” “about,” or “with” something borrowed from our interactions with the world. It is, therefore, the tangible and observable which is essential in defining our experience of mental events.

The Sensate and Ideational Dimensions of Symbols and Metaphors
Important symbols⸺religious icons, political emblems, commercial logos, key words, a meaningful piece of writing such as a poem⸺work their magic by having their perceptual aspects reinforce their ideational aspects and vice versa. In this way certain representations become powerful motivating mechanisms that influence behavior and beliefs. This was the great insight explored by the anthropologist Victor Turner.
Nonsensate knowledge is built upon and through sensate experiences via semantic shifting, i.e., metaphors. This is a type of knowing that is “from” but not “of” the senses, i.e., nonsensate knowledge refers to ideas that are not directly tied to or shaped by the immediate perceptual environment. Indeed, our conceptual processes are fundamentally metaphorical. The capability to organize experience and order our ideas of the world using tropes means that metaphor itself is a perception, just like seeing, hearing, touching, tasting, etc. Thus, metaphors (and their various cousins, such as similes and analogies) do not only give us a way of conceptualizing a preexisting reality, nor are they merely a matter of language; metaphors do more than just describe since they structure our engagement with the world.
The visible material world of things and objects interacts with the invisible, abstract realm of ideas and feelings. The exchange of these aspects is important because it reifies a symbol’s meanings, thereby adding to its persuasive power. This linkage sometimes involves a certain degree of “shouldness.” In other words, moral messages acquire a sensory immediacy and compellingness. This resonates with Ludwig Wittgenstein’s dictum that “ethics and aesthetics are one and the same.” The ideational (values and meanings; normative; proclaiming a prescriptive point; moral imperatives; obligations; what we need to do) becomes associated with the sensate (feelings and emotions; longings; appeals to our animal spirits; corporeal desires; the desirable; what we want to do).

Exorcising Demons
I decided to compose poems not because I wanted to write poetry, but because I felt coerced by personal demons kicking up psychic fragments that littered my mind. In some cases, it was a desire to rid my head of old and odd whisperings inspired by haunting “half-experiences” (dreamy, barely remembered memories that may or may not recount actual events), some of which have been with me since very early childhood. In other cases, I felt compelled to describe a scene whose sublimity unsettled me. “Therapeutic” might be too strong a word, but it is in the neighborhood as it describes why I wrote these poems.
Originally, I composed poems using the traditional Japanese haiku pattern of 5 morae/7 morae/5 morae (morae are not exactly syllables, e.g., in English a long vowel is counted as one syllable, but in Japanese it is considered two morae). I found the 17-morae pattern restricting, as was the convention that a Japanese haiku should contain a seasonal reference (kigo). Then I tried American-style haiku (lunes), both the styles developed by Jack Collom (3 words/5 words/3 words) and Robert Kelly (5 syllables/3 syllables/5 syllables). With a few exceptions, I settled on Collom lunes.
This short collection is categorized by themes (the poems lack titles) and curated from different versions of poems (the number of variants is indicated in parentheses). From these versions I selected my favorites and put the rest in storage. I have included commentary to illustrate the interchange between the sensate and ideational. While some think such an analysis detracts from an enigmatic vagueness and is overly clinical, my remarks are part of an attempt to calm troubling mental rumblings that, while not plaguing my mind, have to a degree preoccupied my thoughts.

The Collection

Enchanting Sound

Young boy points
To plane’s drone amid stars.
Listening to mystery.

I begin with this lune because several of its elements reappear in several other poems below. It emerges from a very old memory. I was quite young, perhaps a toddler, standing in an alley on a cold, clear night and I stopped to look up, captivated by the source of a strange sound in the dark, inky heavens. To this day I still associate the sensory experience of the humming drone of a distant plane with the unsettling curiosity of faraway, bewitching places, both geographical and within my psyche.

Listening to the Infinite

Toward the horizon
A droning, wraith-like plane edges.
To hear eternity.

This lune echoes the sentiments of the previous one. The perception of droning is both primal and transcendent, beautifully haunting but melancholy; it is listening to the music of the infinite or being allowed to eavesdrop on another, unearthly dimension. Visually the horizon leads to thoughts of foreverness. The plane is barely visible from earth, making it ghostly and making me wonder if it is really a man-made flying contraption or a gliding winged-spirit from another sphere of existence (three other versions).

The Sky Limitless

Boundless blue sky
Swallows up a tiny plane.
The vast infinite.

Another echo of the very first lune. This one does not include any reference to droning, but the plane’s existence implies it. In any case, one day I realized how the gentle pulsating resonance and unbounded, horizonless sky merge sound and spatiality into the same fabric of reality. The celestial domain, taken in by the eyes, suggests the abstract idea of the infinite, which leads to notions of insignificance, i.e., the solitary plane is lost, absorbed by the cosmos. Or the plane may represent the soul of each individual, confronting the overwhelming awesomeness of the absolute, tunneling through reality, pushing on through the universe on some unknown trajectory (three other versions).

The Forest Stares Back

At wood’s edge
Dog and master intensely stare.
Both are awed.

Though “night” and “dark” do not appear in this poem, it describes a wooded area in a misty evening, made ghostly white by snow covering the tree branches. Not only the human, but even his dog senses an otherworldly presence deep in the forest that keeps an eye on passersby (two versions).

The Race of Life

Gunshot, heavy panting.
Track curves, a finish line.
Life’s a race.

Even during an intense, high-pressure spurt of physical energy, the psyche finds a way to give other meanings to whatever we are doing. While competing in a high school track event my mind couldn’t resist searching for other interpretations of my bodily movements. Other versions of this poem describe chasing the “blinding sun” (i.e., interfering with focusing on some objective) and “finish line in sight” (i.e., meeting a challenge; about to reach an important personal goal; persistence pays off). Also appearing in other variants were “running within lines,” signifying the value of playing fair with others, “staying in one’s lane,” and maintaining appropriate boundaries (two other versions).

The Moon Goddess Visits

Moon Goddess descends,
A divine visit⸺great honor!
A mere dream.

This is based on an event that was probably the closest thing I’ve ever had to a religious experience. It is inspired by an actual dream I had in my late teens: I was in an iridescent pasture that could be accessed by a gate located on the street on which that my grandparents lived. In the dream the full moon suddenly floated down from the sky and transformed itself into a half-moon shaped boat. Riding upon this shimmering lunar ferry, with whitish, willowy sails, was a translucent, alabaster-skinned moon goddess, who appeared as if she had been lifted from a Wedgwood Cobalt Blue vase. I felt humbled and privileged to have received such a visitation. Surely, I concluded, such dignified beauty must have something of great import to deliver to me. But I was sorely disappointed when I awoke before she could convey to me any great revelation (one other version).

A Summer Night’s Swim with Spirits

The pool’s waves
Reflect on leaves of trees.
Ghosts dancing above.

A dip in a cool electric-blue pool on a quiet, sultry summer night is made more interesting when one’s senses are persuaded to see spirits manifested as flickerings and glimmerings. The gently lapping water project light onto the canopy formed by trees, conjuring up a spectral show.

Pool, Sky, and Soul

Under blue sky,
In placid water body floats.
Soul at peace.

§

The pool below,
Reflects cloudless blue sky above.
The infinite mirrored.

§

Sky above,
Pool below.
Soul between.

The first lune of this theme depicts me lying on my back on an inflatable lounge and looking up at the shining azure sky. I could see nothing but blueness, and this mirrored how the utter calmness of the soothing water had emptied my mind. Any thoughts were now “see-through,” i.e., I was cognizant of them but somehow distant from them. A profound restfulness and tranquility overcame me; meditation without trying (one other version). The second and third poem describe a spatial encapsulation of the totality of all existence. The pool is an earthly, this-world microcosm of the sky, which is the boundless empyreal macrocosm. Somewhere between “the above” and “the below” is the individual soul, an imperfect reflection of allness that futilely attempts to capture and control ultimate reality.

The Hall of Holiness in My House

At hallway’s end
The door strangely beckons me.
Night of revelations.

§

Dark hall,
Door beckons.
A presence.

If the hallway’s lights were off in the house I grew up in during the evening, walking to my room sent a chill down my spine. The hallway was long. And for some reason seeing the darkness behind my half-opened bedroom door instilled within me a sense of a numinous “otherness” waiting for me, a sacredness possessed of something waiting to be conveyed.

Running Alone at Dusk

Rolling green hills,
A golf course at dusk.
A lone runner.

Not far from my house was a municipal golf course in which I ran in the summer while in high school. I would have to wait until dusk, when most golfers had finished so as not to get beaned in the head by a stray golf ball. Not having anyone around afforded me an exhilarating freedom; no gazes from others, no cars or people to dodge as on the street. Being with myself among the manicured hilly lawns that stretched far in the distance made me feel small and effaced my ego, but in a reassuring sense. Like blue, green has an inherently comforting effect.

Walking Home in Winter

Walking, snow crunches,
A glowing warmth from windows.
Night cloaks me.

When in high school a bus would drop me off at a corner and then I would have to walk about a mile to my house. The walk was pleasurable, as I usually felt satisfied after a long day at school, and what seemed like an even longer workout for indoor track. Sometimes it was so cold that the snow made a funny squeaking sound with each footstep. The windows of each house emitted a reassuring yellow-orangish radiance. The contrasts of wintriness versus warmth, others versus myself, and darkness versus luminosity brought to mind indifference versus protection, exposure versus privacy, and the unfamiliar versus the welcoming. I wondered what went on in each household and if anyone could hear my squeaking footsteps. But I wasn’t too concerned as I felt anonymous, shrouded as I was by the night.

Pumpkin Patch and Graveyard

Side by side,
Orange pumpkins and grey tombstones.
Souls born anew.

I was in Massachusetts on a brilliant autumn day walking down a country road when I noticed a white fence separating two fields. In one were old gravestones, while in the other were growing finely ball-shaped pumpkins. The positioning of the fields cried out “the deceased are reborn as orange orbs!” I knew I was seeing death and the promise of rebirth in one glance⸺the circle of life. When I asked my wife to comment on this scene, she also noticed the juxtaposition, observing that the departed are granted new life (four other versions).

Grateful for Dinner

Silently she cooks.
Cold night in the city.
Warm meal arrives.

§

Hair pulled back,
Wife in a steamy kitchen.
Long day ends.

For many years I lived in Tokyo. This metropolitan monstrosity’s unnerving hustle and bustle, commuting crowds crammed onto public transportation, harsh neon nightscape, and surprisingly chilly winter nights could be draining. But my wife’s support and cozy apartment greatly assuaged my tired nerves. Preparing a meal without speaking hints at uncomplaining, while hair pulled-back suggests being ready for culinary action. Both lunes employ contrasts to drive home perceptual elements, though in the second poem they are only implied: cold versus warm, steaminess inside versus iciness outside. And both poems close the sensate–ideational divide by denoting how nourishment for the body signifies sustenance for the spirit (two other versions).

Coyote Eyes

Coyote eyes float,
My eyes must glimmer too.
I’m the ghost?

§

Walking at night.
Coyote eyes glow and glide.
Vanish like ghost.

Almost every night, when I walked a trail near our home in Tucson, I would see the eyes of coyotes looking back at me. Their eyes drifted, like small fireflies in the darkness. I often wondered what their sighting of me triggered in their minds (two other versions). The first lune highlights the hovering eyes of a creature, but these had the human experient think that undoubtedly the owners of those optical red beads are carefully observing him. In the second lune the darting eyes in the darkness invoked idea of how the night is full of unknown beings.

Praying in the Desert Night

To starry skies,
Hillside cacti lift their arms
In reverent prayer.

§

To saucer moon,
Man-shaped cacti raise their arms
In worshipful pose.

Another sight that captured my imagination in the desert were all the cacti crowded on hills, shaped like men, with their limbs held up as if praying; nature in an act of self-reverence. Person-shaped plants pointing to the beauty of the full moon or the star-studded heavens aroused within me the idea that there is more going in the world of nature than meets the eye (four other versions).

Observing Mountains

Walking toward mountains,
They look down at me.
I am judged.

§

At path’s end,
Observant hills trace my trail.
Guarding ancient wisdom.

§

Towards small mountains
I walk a giant ribbon.
Life lies ahead.

Besides spectral coyotes and reverential cacti, low-lying mountains and rolling hills also seemed to have an animistic presence. At the trailhead of a long path I used to hike were foothills and peaks whose grave and dignified immobility made me feel as if they were carefully watching me as I approached them on foot. These daily walks were spontaneously meditative (an opportunity to ponder my own life’s journey), and the gaze of mounds, perhaps protecting age-old wisdom filled me with a measure of humility, as if I were being interrogated by the desert landscape as I trekked out my narrative (three other versions).

Metallic Birds of the Urban Night

Helicopters circle above,
Chopping air, beams slicing darkness.
Trouble brews below.

The skies of southern Arizona, for whatever reason, always seemed to be abuzz with police, military, and other types of helicopters. One day, like a giant metallic bird, an ambulance helicopter landed in front of our house to take away an individual thrown from his ATV as he was racing up and down the street. From our house we frequently could hear and see what were presumably police helicopters in the evening, circling over an area and using their searchlights to pierce the night and shed light on the disturbance on the ground; perhaps a fleeing fugitive, a robbery gone wrong, or a car chase (three other versions). In a dream the cutting noise of the blades became the flapping wings of a flying dinosaur wearing a shiny crown, searching for its prey on the ground.

Heaven’s Special Show

Flying at night,
Lightning—giant cotton balls ablaze.
What earth misses.

“Flying through lightning” does not sound very inviting. “Flying above lightning” sounds a lot better, and one night I had the opportunity to witness billowing clouds on fire stretching toward the horizon. It looked as if the gods were at war, hurtling lightning bolts at each other that exploded behind banks of bulging clouds. Or as if celestial sky spirits were putting on an awe-inspiring performance just for us passengers. I thought about how people on the ground, fast asleep, were obliviousness to the stunning lightshow far above their heads. All this exciting razzle-dazzle made me ponder about how we can be totally unaware of places and spaces pregnant with spectacle, whether earthly or heavenly (four versions).

Dog Dreams

A busy intersection,
A dog looks to cross.
In which direction?

§

Dog close by,
Soulful eyes look at me.
Furry four-legged loyalty.

§

Slumped on couch,
Furry friend frets and whimpers.
A dog dreams.

The first lune of this theme pivots around the perceptual act of looking, but implicates some indecision and choice that require deliberation, as if the dog were planning his day amidst the comings and goings of others. In the second lune physical nearness, the touchability and softness of furriness, and the connecting power of eye contact evoke the ethics of unquestionable dependability and faithfulness. In the third lune movement and sound—sleeping, twitching, whining—suggest unseeable canine thoughts. All three poems attribute a sophisticated psychology to dogs. Of course, animal minds are different from those of humans. But we still anthropomorphize animals, especially our pets. We cannot truly know the mind of a canine, any more than we can completely understand the thoughts of another human being (though obviously in the case of the latter we actually understand a great deal). And yet a primitive bond ties us to our dogs. These creatures, grounding us with their pure, unadulterated affection and unconditional acceptance, are humanity’s most secure connection to the nonhuman world of nature.

The Observing Grandfather Clock

The staring face
Of the old grandfather clock.
I’m being watched.

Humans instinctively anthropomorphize objects, natural and made-man. I do not have a clear memory of seeing a particular grandfather clock that appeared animated. But through the years anytime I see one I can’t help but see it as somehow possessed of life. Their round face, imposing height, and distinctive “voice” heard as chiming make them seem as if they are alive. These tall timepieces tell two types of time, that of the hours and that of the passing hours and days of those the clock silently watched over for many years. Certainly, these standing time tellers have witnessed so much over the years that, having absorbed the life energy of others, they just might come to life (one other version).

written by ©Brian J. McVeigh

Brian J. McVeigh has an MA and a PhD in anthropology from Princeton University, as well as an MS in counseling. He is interested in how the human mind adapts, both through history and psychotherapeutically. Inspired by and using the theories of Julian Jaynes as a theoretical framework, he has published 16 books on the history of Japanese psychology, the origins of religions, the Bible, spirit possession, art and popular culture, linguistics, nationalism, and changing definitions of self, time, and space. He has lived and worked in Japan and China for many years, taught at the University of Arizona for ten years, and now works in private practice as a licensed mental health counselor.

Licensed Mental Health Counselor, Private Practice. BA Asian Studies & Poli Sci, MA Anthro, MS Counseling, U at Albany, State U of NY; PhD Anthro Dept, Princeton U. POSITIONS: Asst Prof, Kōryō International College, Nagoya; Assoc Prof, Tōyō Gakuen U, Tokyo; Dept Chair, Tokyo Jogakkan College, Tokyo; Dept of E Asian Studies, U of Arizona; Behavioral Health Counselor, St Peter’s Addiction & Recovery Center

Books by Brian J. McVeigh

Brian J. McVeigh Website

WRITTEN BY BRIAN J. MCVEIGH ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. ALL WRITING IN THIS POST IS A COPYRIGHT OF BRIAN J. MCVEIGH. THIS AN AUTHORIZED DUPLICATION WITH PERMISSION AND EXPRESSED CONSENT

Feature Photo by Mitchell Pluto

Tadeusz Baranowski Non-Obvious Painting

In November 2022 I invited Tadeusz Baranowski to talk a little bit about his life and his work. Tadeuszu graciously accepted which I am very grateful for, his thoughts on his life and abstract painting can be found here in Hidden Motion.

Tadeusz’s 2023 show organized by the Auschwitz Culture Center. Poster by Jarek Składanek

While known internationally for his original comic books, Tadeusz also paints Non-Obvious Painting that emphasizes free and spontaneous appearing expressions. Tadeusz’s paintings are deliberately built by a technique that uses wood, fabric, polystyrene, acrylics, and oils. One painting sometimes takes many months.

I spent several hours looking at Tadeusz’s work which I found universally appealing. Abstraction has a reputation that is not clearly understood like understanding quantum foam, synchronicity and the the nature of nothing. I think Tadeusz Baranowski’s paintings are a release of energy in a still life. There is no narrative or conventional images. There is a sense of time somewhere. The paintings convey a space scape with unidentified forces. These interactions influence the surface and time that contains them. Usually these tensions are dynamic, sometimes explosive, but firmly positioned so we can consciously see them. When I look into these paintings I apprehend different emotional and cognitive states. Each painting is worth meditating on.

Through our correspondence in email Tadeusz and I immediately found we shared a common love and respect of nature. Tadeusz mentioned trips to the Masurian country with his wife Anna. He said he currently lived next to a forest near Warsaw, Poland. Tadeusz considers himself a lone wolf in the universe. He enjoys swimming as a contemplative activity. A prolific amount of nature photos can be found on Tadeusz’s Facebook page. The photos capture a rhythm and pattern of nature. I speculate Tadeusz’s photos of flowing water, broken trees, flowers and insects may have provided a scaffolding or study for his paintings. Tadeusz Baranowski’s show was curated by Magdalena Grochowska and will be shown from February 10th to March 14, 2023 at the Oświęcimskie Centrum Kultury

Director of OCK, Monika .wi ,tek-Smrek, curator Magdalena Grochowska and Tadeusz Baranowski

Tierra Profunda Rene Ortega

René Ortega utiliza fórmulas de liminalidad para iniciar al espectador a experimentar los misterios del inframundo. Hay una puerta de flores, una escalera de anillos a túneles, afinada con un aro de colores. Todo esto está aquí dentro de los secretos de nuestra tierra. En estos pasos buscamos un centro que ya es un estado completo, un lugar unido por los opuestos e igual a sí mismo. René agrega esquinas al círculo giratorio para crear una faceta para ver otros espacios y otros tiempos.

Mitchell Pluto

TIERRA PROFUNDA

Mi enfoque se enfatiza en la búsqueda de las respuestas transcendentales las problemáticas ecológicas y sociales de la humanidad que enfrentamos actualmente.

Con mis obras pretendo hacer conciencia para situar al ser humano como parte importante de la naturaleza es el volver encontrándose con muestro yo interno y nuestros sentidos que se encuentran en un estado dormido es el volver a mirar y observar como un niño para situarnos en las profundidades de los infinitos subsuelos y planos de tierra imaginaria de mundos micros organismos vivos subterráneos que se transmutan constantemente en máquinas orgánicas voladoras y así te llevo transportándote a mi imaginario poético donde danzan líneas interminables y planos de vida que se juntan y separan al mismo tiempo incansable búsqueda de lo desconocido como las estrellas y la naturaleza transmutando a infinitos planos profundo de colores y formas que voy realizando atreves de esta incansable y cambiante movimiento y sonido de la vida.

Escrito por ©René Ortega

Rene Fernando Ortega Villarroel

René Ortega, fue uno de los ganadores en la bienal internacional de arte contemporáneo 3 de octubre de 2022. René ha expuesto obra en Chile y Argentina. Está involucrado en muchos programas de arte cultural que se han relacionado con hospitales, niños y la enseñanza del arte profesionalmente. Su muestra más reciente fue Mental Labyrinths en la galería de arte del Centro Cultural Til Til el 18 de junio de 2022.

“Mi preocupación es la figura humana como sentimiento de estados primitivos e irracionales, cuyo punto principal son las cabezas, pensamiento universal de la creación del hombre y centro del universo. Todo ello condujo a una mutación del lenguaje plástico y pictórico”.

Voyeur Rising by Richard Gessner

When I read Richard Gessner’s Voyeur Rising I imagined the story as an adult cartoon with liminal existential qualities. Voyeur Rising reminds me of Vladimir Nabokov’s use of an unreliable narrator who is found in most current social media video and reels. This collective trick usually deceives the viewer with a decoy. This is the place where Gessner’s work lurks, to induce the peripheral mind while feeding the predatory eye. Here we see the ultimate conflict and fantasy of the Freudian id haunting the masculine mind. A pleasure principle with an intrusive desire to poach voluptuous women without any commitment- but to squirt sperm, to clone more succulent women so they are everywhere. The fantasy has boundaries in Gessner’s character who is aware of his masculine delusion, that every women he find’s attractive isn’t a possession but an unfulfilled wish. All this takes place by the primordial ocean, a surface alive with waves.

-Mitchell Pluto

Strategically positioning his beach chair, pretending to be reading a daily newspaper, Joey Genauski, nonchalant, invisible, just by chance, settles in a tight rectangle of sand bordering the burgundy beach towels of two 19 year old college girls the age of his granddaughter.

The girls, an ash blonde, and a brunette with auburn highlights, have soft buttery skin, shapely, wide hipped—all curvaceous splendor—

Perfect brown bodies striped with pale tan lines sharply outlining pale pink asses and naturally large breasts jiggling slightly in the warm breeze of early summer.

The tan lines form a pale faded triangle V of panty line extending upwards. From butt crack to lower back, panty lines curving around thighs to below belly buttons—traces of cast of bikini no longer worn.

Gradations of pale pink skin merging to olive, cinnamon, golden brown, pale breasts encircled with D cup outlines of frilly brassieres. Burnt Sienna areoles and nipples a darker shade of brown than their overall tans.

Crisp yellow and gold designer bikinis, light summer dresses, brassieres. And panties are strewn across towels covered with tubes of sun screen, Purses, car keys, fruit, sandwiches cold drinks, a paperback of classic 19th century literature and a current glossy fashion magazine glistening in the sun.

Furtively, through dark sunglasses, Joey Genauski gazes longingly towards the girls’ spread open legs. Their Smoothly shaven vaginas, A reddish salmon pink, are soothed with cooling aloe vera. Blue and white beach umbrellas with a swordfish logo line the beach Landscape. Its a Saturday afternoon in early June, the weekend crowds work to Joey’s advantage, giving him an excuse to sit close to single women without being obvious about it. The crowds camouflaging his true intentions, allowing him to move frequently, unnoticed by the morally reproving beach patrol seeking to squelch his habit of constantly wandering the beach in quest of a perfect view.

Other voyeurs, Joey’s competition, watch the beach entrance from a distance, waiting for the arrival of young ladies, single or in groups. Approaching the ladies after they have gotten naked under their beach umbrellas.

Most women strip naked, but some keep their bikini bottoms on. Some wear Brazilian string bikinis, flesh toned thongs, almost nude, but not quite. Pale maidens wiggle out of floral print summer dresses, shorts, and candy striped one piece bathing suits.

Voluptuous brown girls peel off demure, white see-through-when-wet suits, revealing all to bulging male eyes, looking, gawking, looking away— Diaphanous mesh panties slide down svelte hips, falling to sand. Brightly colored, fancy brassieres pop off as delicate fingers reach behind unhooking clasps shining in the sun, catching the eye of a seagull flying in blue skies above.

Secret cameramen get up in the nooks and crannies of spread eagled women half asleep in the sun. Joey leaves the two girls, vanishing into thick masses of beach regulars, middle aged, tanned and leathery, marking their territory with windscreens, coolers and little plastic flags poked in the sand.

In Joey’s absence, competing beach voyeurs, some bold, well hung, smooth talkers, will succeed in engaging the ash blonde and brunette with auburn highlights in a lively conversation. Mastering bare body language a virile stud will advance to slow massage, rubbing baby oil of their perfect bodies glistening in the sun.

Slick voyeurs who remain at the top of the food chain will return to the beach, summer after summer, appearing like clockwork as in the legendary return of swallows to Mission San Juan Capistrano—

Their pick up routines with the ladies will remain similar and predictable year after year, decade after decade. Enticing the girls with superficial big talk of financial conquest, fancy cookies and little airplane bottles of alcohol.

In the tidal pools of voyeur nursery school, untested new generations of voyeurs emerge like baby sea turtle hatchlings making a mad dash seaward—

climbing the slippery slope of a succulent female ass just over the horizon,

Joey Genauski wanders into a gaggle of girls taking it all off for the first time-

In the distance, randy couples frolic in the surf, avoiding the June Jellyfish in the waves, out at sea, fishing boats come in close to shore, catching a panoramic eyeful of skin.

“Voyeur Rising” (C) 2022 Richard Gessner

Richard Gessner’s fiction has been published in Air Fish: an anthology of speculative work, Rampike, Ice River, Coe Review, Another Chicago Magazine, Happy, The Act, Sein und Werden, Skidrow Penthouse, The Pannus Index, Fiction International and many other magazines. A collection, Excerpts from the Diary of a Neanderthal Dilettante & The Man in the Couch was published by Bomb Shelter Props. Gessner’s drawings and paintings have appeared in Raw Vision, Courier News, Asbury Park Press, Rampike, Skidrow Penthouse, and exhibited at Pleiades Gallery, Hamilton Street Gallery, Cry Baby Gallery, The Court Gallery and the Donald B. Palmer Museum. Richard wrote The Conduit and Other Visionary Tales of Morphing Whimsy. He lives in Montclair, New Jersey.

The Conduit and Other Visionary Tales of Morphing Whimsy Audible

THIS WRITING IS AN AUTHORIZED DUPLICATION WITH PERMISSION AND EXPRESSED CONSENT

Mon Univers et ses Étrangetés Muriel Albert

La création est en soi un acte de transformation.

C’est un aller-retour entre le monde intérieur et l’effort pour
l”ex”térioriser.

Dans ce va et vient, les ressentis s”ex”priment et l’objet externe se
construit et la découverte relance le processus créatif.

La toile du “cri kintsugi” illustre la douleur vécue et la transformation.

Le personnage central porte un masque de joie qui s’effondre pour laisser place à sa tristesse.

Il engage à accueillir les émotions et à lâcher prise.

Les cicatrices peuvent alors devenir une force. Dans le tableau les
cicatrices sont magnifiées par l’utilisation de papiers dorés.

Au cours du processus de création, je transfère, je transforme, je
m’allège. La joie authentique peut alors s’exprimer.

écrit par ©Muriel Albert

Muriel Albert

Muriel Albert Facebook

Muriel Albert Instagram