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Tilly May 2013
"Life is not always black & white, Mr Magpie...
it's ALIVE! 
~ See Yourself ~
Mix the spectrum, with those stunning pigments."
Look closely at his preened feathers :)
http://www.rspb.org.uk/wildlife/birdguide/name/m/magpie/index.aspx

They are also one of the few creatures that can recognise themselves in a mirror test :)
Vidya Nov 2011
in the way crows fly
crooked against the clouds I find

love written on the corners of
maps & the backs of my knees that you
kiss with reckless
abandon
and perhaps the crows are
lying but they

could’ve fooled
me
Nigel Morgan Dec 2014
The Open Studio

Usually the journey by car flattens expectation, and there’s that all-preoccupying conversation, so one only takes in the view where there’s a halt at a traffic light or at the occasional junction. A pattern on a wall, a damaged sign, a curtained window. Waiting, one looks and sometimes remembers, and what one sees later reappears in dreams or moments of disordered contemplation. A train journey is another matter: you sit and look, and when it is a trip rarely made, you put the book away and gaze beyond the ***** windows to a living landscape that scrolls past the frame of view. When you arrive there’s inevitably a walk: today through a town’s industrial hinterland, its pastness where former mill buildings have tactfully changed their use to become creative places, peopled with aspiration and strange activity. Walking reveals the despair of forlorn roadside business falling back into alleys ending in neglected and empty buildings, so much *******, silences of waste and decay.

But here’s the space, there’s a sign on a board outside, OPEN STUDIO TODAY. Entering inside it is quiet and cold, the door remaining open to let in the December air and the hoped-for visitors. But it’s bright and light: a welcoming presence of work and people and coffee and cake. And here’s the studio, a narrow space between make-shift walls where the artist works, where the work awaits, laid out on the surfaces of desks and tables, on shelves and walls, specimens of making; ‘stuff’, the soon-to-be, the collected, the in-progress-perhaps, the experimental.

Good, a heater blows noisily onto cold fingers. In the turbulent air pieces tremble slightly from their hangings on the walls. They are placed at a good height, a ‘good to be close to examine the detail’ height, the constructed, the made, the woven, the stitched, the printed, all assembled by the actions of those quiet, intent, those steady hands. There, a poem on a wall next to the window. Here, photographs of places unlabelled, unrecognised, but undoubtedly significant as a guide to the memory. Look, a dead badger lying in a road.

Next to the studio, a gallery space. Two walls covered with framed prints, well lit, a body of work captured behind glass, in limbo, waiting patiently for the attentive eye to sort the detail, that touch of the object on paper, that mark found and brought out of time and place. Perhaps these ‘things’, some known, some mysteriously foreign adrift from their natural context, have been collected by that bent form on a windswept beach, by the hand reaching out for the  gift in the gutter, struck by the foot on the track, unhidden in the grass by the riverside, what we might pass as without significance and beyond attention. This artist gives even the un-namable a new life, a collected-together form.

Moving closer let the eye enter the artist’s world of form and texture - and colour? There is a patina certainly, colour’s distant echo, what is seen on the edges, a left-behindness, more than any subtlety of language knows how to express, beyond comfortable descriptions, not excitable, where the spirit is damped down and is restful to the mind, a constancy of background, like a capturing of a cloud but bulging full of hints and suggestions, where texture is everywhere, nature’s rich patterns colliding with things once invented and made, used once, once used left and changed, thrown away, to be brought before the selecting eye and the possibility of form with meaning its patient partner.



J.M.W.Turner writes  on poetry and painting

Poetry having a more extensive power
Than our poor art, exerts its influence
Over all our passions; anxiety for our future
Reckoned the most persistent disposition.

Poetry raises our curiosity,
Engages the mind by degrees
To take an interest in the event,
And keeping that event suspended,
Overturns all we might expect.

The painter’s art is more confined,
Has nothing to equate with the poet’s power.
What is done by painting must be done at once,
And at one blow our curiosity receives
All the satisfaction it can know.

The painter can be novel, various and contrast,
Such is our pleasure and delight when put in motion.
Art, therefore, administers only to those wants,
And only to desires that exercise the mind.



Twilight

A day aside and diaried into busy lives
So to a morning walk to Turner’s View
Above the River Wharfe and Farnley Hall
Where it is said the inspiration came
For his famous oil of Hannibal,
with elephants and storm-glad Alps.

On to lunch where six around a table
Souped with salad before we homed
Mid afternoon the day in decline
We were done with words so watched
The edge-timed light flow between our hands.

Inevitably we climbed the stairs to lie
In twilight’s path beneath the skylight’s
Square a sliver-moon we couldn’t see
Gracing the remaining daylight hour
Marbled with shadows our collected
Curves and planes lay as sculptures
In the approaching dimity and dark
Each experimental stroke of touch
Holding us dumb to speech and thought
As night’s soft blanket covered us entire


Northcliffe Woods

Oh nest in the sky, empty of leaves,
Those tangled branches
Reaching out from twisted trunks
Into the sullen clouds above, when

Suddenly a crow -
Corvidae’, she said -
And simultaneously pulled
a hank of ivy from a nearby tree.

Hedera Helix I thought
But did not say, instead
I whispered to myself
Those ancient names I knew.

Bindwood, Lovestone
(For the way it clings
To bricks but ravages walls),
A vine with a mind of its own. But

She, in a different frame that day,
Apart, adrift and far away
From our usual walk and talk,
Fixed her gaze on the woodland floor,

Whilst skyward I sought again that
Corvid high in the branches web
Black beyond black beyond black
Against the pale white canopy above.


Franco*

Blow She Still
Ed insieme bussarono
Sweet Soft Frain
Cloche Lem Small
Spiri About Sezioni
Portrait Eco Agar
Le ruisseau sur l’escalier
Etwas ruhiger im Ausdruck
Jeux pour deux
For Grilly Fili Argor
Atem L’ultima sera
Omar Flag Ave
The Heart’s Eye*

play joy touch
code panel macro
refraction process solo
quick-change constrained
hiatus sonority colour
energy post-serial scintillating
aleatoric reuse transformation

A lonely child who imagined music
on sunday walks, he would talk about
how one lives with music as someone
would talk about how one might live
with illness or a handicap. He said,
‘You cannot write your life story in
music because words express the self
best whereas music expresses something
quite beyond words’.
This is collection of new and previous verse and prose gathered together as a gift for Christmas 2014 and New Year 2015. Each poem was accompanied by a photograph or painting. Sadly the wonderful Hello Poetry has yet to allow such pairings. The poem constructed from the words of J.M.W.Turner makes a good case I think for bringing image and word together - at least occasionally.
ERR Jun 2012
Careful to make respectful steps, she padded lightly through
The grass a weaving wanderer
Investigating the stone garden with
The ashen faced man calling her name
He was perverted, but insightful
And he shared the roots of the stone trees
A wealthy merchant lay with
A poor laborer
Side by side and synchronized demise-wise
Death, the pale guide said, is the great equalizer
Life is not fair; Death is.

Pictures marked the grander tombs and one caught
Her searching eyes, reptile
Slither serpent slinks and eats circular self loop
Symbolizing eternal, consume-die resume
The local ghost noted vert reaching rest stones
******* competition in the inadequate hereafter

A corvidae watched, perched: “wait your turn”, then fly sky
The cold wind eavesdropped on
Her chestbeat, early cycle thumps (time) to spare
Knowing her fear
The winded skeletons of the stone garden howled like wicked tuning forks
Paul Gilhooley Apr 2016
That eerie black eye watches on from afar,
My wild squawks in the night, your dreams they will scar,
Perched close to your window sits this harbinger of death,
Almost willing you near, as I steal your last breath.

No heavenly song as I scream out my caw,
On flesh I will feast, and I like its taste raw,
A shiny black plumage and sharp pointed beak,
A scavenger by nature, as more death I shall seek.

Perched on a church roof, or even gravestone,
My demonic wild calls, chill right through to your bone,
Many myths, fables, legends claim in just here to scare,
But whenever there’s death, you can bet I’ll be there.

Shown fearsome in film and immortalised in verse,
Am I really that fearful, or is this my curse?
Of diminutive size and of moderate powers,
It’s oft claimed that I’m found in the smallest of hours.

A poet called Poe, scared the world with my cousins,
You call us a ****** when you see us in dozens,
A proverb it claims, that you may want to stone me,
And that death will come calling if I’m sat here all lonely.

With a cousin of beauty, I’ve a family that’s vast,
Yet for some sad strange reason, as the villain I’m cast,
Can you tell what I am?  Have you guessed? Do you know?
It’s quite obvious of course, I am simply The Crow!*

© Cinco Espiritus Creation
2014
Ryan O'Leary Mar 2020
Just imagine what the
Genus Corvus thinks
of all this quarantine
business right now.

En Francais Le Corbeau
The Crow, a film about
someone in the village
who knows secrets of all.

Nature is aware that
something is amiss, I
can feel it, from watching
while walking the roads.

But it is Spring, their busy
time, nesting, not easy for
Family Corvidae with this
continuous easterly wind.

Not only that, the litter
louts are not about, so
less available food on the
kerbsides around town.

So, let's not become too
obsessed about ourselves
and think about the urban
wildlife, now our adoptees.

They have been abandoned,
no children going to school,
no gossiping at the gates, no
noise, cars, double glazed out.

There is more to life than just
ourselves or has television
made us hostages of voluntary
isolation even before this epidemic.

A virus has been infecting us
far many years now, just take
a look at peoples back gardens,
or into their shopping baskets.

Useless eaters indeed, if the
planet was a farm and some
of us the animals, I doubt very
much we'ed be kept as pets.

Old McDonald is not senile
but he is a capitalist, with an
empire to run, so his ranch
needs to be super productive.

When Enrico's old horse was
too old to work, he was turned
out by his master, this is what
Covid - 19 is really really about.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IJFNPRr7-HQ
Ryan O'Leary Jan 2020
Rook gathering
         listen to Jack Daw
latest news on
          ****** of Crows.
Ryan O'Leary Dec 2021
Pick-Up Sticks

#

There’s a solitary nest on
the skeletal tree, that of a
Corvidae, well built,
withstood the hurricane.

Twigs from last years windfalls,
it is natures lesson in recycling.

The original name is Mikado,
though the game has been
perfected to an instillation art
form by the Genus Corvus.
Ryan O'Leary May 2020
It was a banquet, a summer
wedding under plum trees.

Long trestles adorned with
evening dressed table skirts.

Lines of L back chairs laced
ribbons balloons with roses.

Red white et bleu candles
burned unevenly quenched.

Wax stains, wine blobs, ash,
lipstick transfer kissed glass.

Place marker, name tag,
wire meshed cork, bottles.

Bunting, well wished cards,
written speech, crumpled.

Fish in shoals, bread in bowls,
lemon fingered watering holes.

Caw winged gleaners, black
tie sophisticates, Corvidae & Co.
Ryan O'Leary Jan 2020
Today it occurred to me,
(at minus 4 ˚ centigrade)
when our water trough
beside the bird feeder,
(which had visible grains
under the ice), was being
jack hammered by beaks
of the Corvidae family,
that this must have been
the etymology of the well
used word of a Crowbar!
Ryan O'Leary Apr 2020
I am Jack Daw with my own
nest requesting a companion
bird for short term relationship.

"My name is Corvidae I'm
a brunette seeking a friend
right now for brooding".

As we crows fly, how far
away are you from arboreal
hill just outside Mallow?

"I'm at the junction of butterfly
cross near zig zag road but
willing to come straight over ".

That's fantastic, I'm on the
first Elm after a Yew with
an Ash either side of me.

"Before coming to see, I want to
know if the nest is overlooked
and how many more on the tree"?

At the moment, only two but
mine it on top in a wonderful
V cluster which is almost in leaf.

"Did you build it yourself, or
is it a last years nest full of old
droppings and feathers"?

This is a new construction from
twigs I sourced under a Pine
so it has a wonderful perfume.

"And what about you Jack, are
you in any way related to the
Dawdle family"?

Well, I am, but I am nothing like
them, I'm up before the birds each
day, last into the rookery at night!

"Sorry Jack, my last Squawker was
a Dawdler and I swore never again,
because birds of a feather **** together".

— The End —