Showing posts with label nature paintings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nature paintings. Show all posts

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Free Verse Poetry-A Slow Rivers Edge



A Slow Rivers Edge

Purchase Art Dr. Murad Abel
fingers of running blue
softly inch the landscape
drawing forth life like a mystic’s finger
upwards life reaches into the daytime air

soft swirling pools of water
 bring cool current to dipping toes
leaves, twigs, and sediment trail round

tree tops glisten against the sun
as the leaves sway in amusement
each together in skyline dance

bridge to nowhere
solid and strong
a bracket on earth

sit upon a tree trunk
 gaze into the horizon
hours of long pauses

the day is as slow as silent
until shadows reach to the watery edge
time is only turning of day to night

Dr. Murad Abel

Poetry is something that has existed as long as man could formulate a sentence. In many cases poems became stories or epics that passed values, beliefs and culture. Free verse poetry is seen as something new but has been around for a few centuries with a more recent renewal. Free verse poetry offers an opportunity to write without the strict rules of more academic forms.

Free verse poetry uses figurative language with metaphors, similes, and personification.  They generally have no set meter nor do they need to fit within a particular rhythm scheme.  That doesn’t mean they don’t have rhythm it just means that it isn’t the same throughout the entire poem and may change on a regular basis.

There are many poets out there from professionals to amateurs. In today’s world these poets gather together into online communities and create profiles that help them support and interact with each other. Building an online community based within shared interest also offers opportunities to market relevant products and services.  If you like poetry you may want to check out the free Poetry Soup at http://www.poetrysoup.com/

Friday, September 6, 2013

Starry Night by Vincent van Gogh


1888-Starry Night
Starry Night by Vincent van Gogh is a depiction of a village in a whistling night. The swirls are designed to ensure the viewers eyes move around the picture and create a point-to-point effect.  It was a surreal painting designed to enhance the overall senses drawn from the picture. He purposely used things like lines where shadows would have been more correct and bright yellow stars where only small figure was needed. 

Some have argued that the peaceful village and stormy night are dichotomies. One offers safety and protection with inviting lights in the window. The night is uninviting, interesting, but wholly a wild place. As with all art, there are psychological interpretations that include his feelings and inner conflicts are expressed onto the painting. A few have argued he suffered from lead poisoning changing his perception.

The Cyprus brush is right in front of the viewer and sort of distorts the view. Analysts believe that the author is expressing his emotions and fears into the painting. He creates his own reality and gives the components within the painting a bigger than life expression indicating the vividness of his memory.  The brush appears to be knotty and creates disequilibrium within the painting that leaves viewers perplexed. 

Van Gough was a post impressionist who attempted to free the art from the forms of the world to create feelings and moods within the viewers. An impressionist would try and paint reality exactly as they saw through their emotions with heightened sensory colors. A post impressionist attempts to distort the lines and use unnatural colors to create feelings.  The paintings are not supposed to be exact reality but full of life beyond reality.

The interpretation I prefer is the people sleeping in the quiet night village are wholly unaware of the life of nature outside.  As humans we are focused on our routines and patterns that center around our immediate needs. Despite our narrow focus the world and its nature continues to move with more life than most of us understand. No one knows the true meaning of the painting thereby leaving the distinct possibility that Vincent van Gough was a night owl who simply enjoyed the life of the evening air. You have to decide for yourself.