Friendship and Artists

I recently was given a book by a writer friend called A Friend Sails in on a Poem, by Molly Peacock. It is a book about two friends who are poets and it’s dedicated to “all friends who make art together”. It put me in mind of all of the friendships I have made of other artists and how easy it is to take these relationships for granted.

This book celebrates the friendship of Molly and her poet friend of 46 years, Phillis Levin. According to the book “they have read and discussed nearly every poem they’ve written, creating an unparalleled friendship.” It puts me in mind of all the years I have sat in writing groups reading to my writer friends and seeking their support in my endeavors.

The past two years I have been collaborating with the Norwegian artist, Irene Christensen, pictured on the left above. We met at the Julia and David White Artist Colony in Costa Rica years ago and it was our mutual love of nature and art through the years that eventually led to our collection of eco-poetry and art called Dread and Splendor: Paintings and Poems for a New Earth.

I guess when one artist collaborates with another, it creates an understanding of the other’s artists’ work that wouldn’t have been possible otherwise. Irene created a series of paintings about women at the heart of the environmental movement. I responded to these evocative paintings in the best way I know, through poetry. 

           Yesterday. Oil, 16” x 12” by Irene Christensen

I responded to Yesterday with a poem called “She Occupies Time,” which begins “no quiet merging with the azure, but an orange  sky, the earth bizarre with diasporic life.” The combination of painting and poem merge to become something new. A way of communicating in art that transcends painting or poem alone.

Irene started exhibiting her paintings with the poems I had written for them. Perilous Journey at the Galleries of the Interchurch Center in New York City. Queen of the Woods was exhibited with poem and painting at the Voices of the Earth Exhibition in Galleri Schaeffers Gate 5, Oslo,Norway. The painting and poem were sold together as that’s what the buyer wanted, the experience of having both the poem and painting together in his home.

The experience of collaborating and supporting each other as writers and artists is an invaluable part of the process. What has your interpersonal journey been like as a writer?

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Michelle Takarczyk will read September 28 at 6:30 pm at the Hudson Park Library, NYC

TRAVEL WRITING REIMAGINED: A READING FROM GALAPAGOS: ISLAS ENCANTADAS

Michelle M. Tokarczyk will read from her recently published book. She will talk about the inspiration for the poems and the process of composing them. Her presentation will include stunning pictures of the Galapagos. There will be ample time for questions and discussion. Michelle M. Tokarczyk has authored two other poetry books: The House I’m Running From and Bronx Migrations.

Her poems have been published in numerous journals and anthologies and have received nominations for Pushcart and Best of the Net Awards. Tokarczyk was raised in a working-class family in New York City. For many years, she was a professor of English at Goucher College in Baltimore, Maryland. Now, she again lives full-time in New York City’s Chelsea. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 6:30 PM.

Michelle M. Tokarczyk has authored two other poetry books: The House I’m Running From and Bronx Migrations. Her poems have been published in numerous journals and anthologies and have received nominations for Pushcart and Best of the Net Awards. Tokarczyk was raised in a working-class family in New York City. For many years, she was a professor of English at Goucher College in Baltimore, Maryland. Now, she again lives full-time in New York City’s Chelsea.

HUDSON PARK LIBRARY 66 LEROY STR, NEW YORK, NY 10014 | 212-243-6876 | MONDAY-FRIDAY 10-6; SATURDAY 10-5; SUNDAY CLOSED.

I will blog on Thursdays. Follow me here.