In this blog we will share with you our vision of beauty, balance, harmony.

As Mark Leach writes in his book Raw Colour with Pastels: “Sound is all around us, and it is musicians who refine that sound into something of beauty. As a painter, I have always felt that my purpose is to craft colour in a similar way, to see through the confusion and seek harmony and beauty.”

And we add: Words, fragments of sentences, spoken noise is all around us, and Ken arranges words in such a way as to capture beauty in the accidental, the ambient soundtrack of life.

Showing posts with label Portishead.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Portishead.. Show all posts

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Mysterons

Rot und Grün - Red and Green 50 x 20 cm acryl/collage by Karin Goeppert





SUPERNATURAL

In order to stay in the good graces
of God you go to incredible lengths
of servitude and inconvenience
even transporting the Sunday school 
brats in that dilapidated station wagon 
your atheistic step father left you in his will  
as post-mortem revenge, as if knowing what   
sort of missionary use you’d put it to,
six little heathens practicing  
a version of human sacrifice in the back seat.
Now if this doesn’t get you a first class ticket
to heaven, there’s nothing left to do but pray  
while cicadas, inspired from On High, cackle in the wind.

If there was such a thing as ghosts they’d play poker on the roof,
smoke our stash, tap into our booze supply, grind
chips and dip into the carpet. One of them of course
would have to be addicted to snuff, leave empty coke cans
everywhere full of brown spit. He would be the one who
left the blue-grass red-neck records out of their sleeves
and all over the floor. Ghosts don’t haunt
                                                      so much as plague. And what’s
worse: not even God can kill them: they’re already dead.

Witches still exist. Today you can see them sashaying
atop perilous designer heels, not brooms, long clean hair shining
on the pallid beaches of Maui and Mykonos  
and not only do the waves gasp and froth, the wind breathe
in fits and starts. Trust me, bro, not only the waves or the wind.
But the only man who has their ear whispers
wicked things therein, the right spells, a promise of tickets
as he gently squeezes your nipples, darling,
to the coolest award shows in town( he looks a little
like Jack Nicholson, circa The Witches of Eastwick,
the same shit-eating grin, the dark glasses), which is all we’re interested in.
That, and how high our shoes can get, in every shade of
witchy pastel, every ice-creamy warlocky hue. The world looks on, spellbound.




Mysterons by Portishead

Sunday, October 6, 2013

L O V E

Blick von Deya - Deya-Vista 28,5 x 38,5 cm





LOVE

It’s good work if you can get it—
that’s what a skeptic might say—but it doesn’t
pay the rent, my friend, it’s all perks, a jazz quartet
in the lobby of a hipster hotel in lower Manhattan
playing the coolest of Brubeck and Miles
and Charles Mingus too, yes, Charles himself. Sometimes love is
fried scampi with pinot grigio—ah, my love, we adore delicious
food, middle-age entering its Major Phase in silk dressing gown  
as a paunchy, grandly decayed author dictating to his assistant
the Great Unreadable Cookbook—goat cheese
spread on slices of sour dough bread warming us 
up, “as it were,” for wild boar stuffed with rum soaked plums.
Love is Olivia Hussey in Zeffirelli’s “Romeo and Juliet,” she with eyelashes
like wings shadowing cheekbone and dimple. Even though I
detested the “school dance” and all it stood for—one nation under
teenage stupidity, with liberty and justice for no one else    
but dumb-assed jocks, of course, and the girls who     
jerked them off in Mustangs, Firebirds, on front porch swings—
I would have taken Olivia to the Junior Prom: so there she is
spreading ripples of dismay and desire and astonishment
at the freshness of her beauty, her iambic pentameter   
otherness. I hear a sprinkler sputter-stutter into life, a basket-
ball pounding in the driveway, “Whole lotta Love” ripping through
my open bedroom window. The world’s going nuts, but this time it’s not so bad.    
 






Glory Box - Portishead