Tuesday, May 29, 2007

BRIAN STRANG AT CANESSA PARK GALLERY (708 Montgomery, SF), OPENING JUNE 3RD 3-6 PM






Statement for the show:

I hadn’t painted in fifteen years when, in 2005, I saw The Poetry Center’s "Poetry and its Arts: Bay Area interactions 1954 – 2004.” Not only is it located just two flights upstairs from my office in the Humanities building at SFSU, but also it has been the touchstone of a poetics from which my own derive, a kind of Neo-Projectivist/Surrealist idea of the imagination. The Poetry Center is home to me and the show featured visual works of many poets I admire. I had already had the notion that I wanted to begin some sort of visual work but the show was the final straw and I began to paint, with a somewhat-obsessive drive, about two summers ago.

I’ve always been interested in art that is guided by forces larger than itself, art that follows more than hammers the contours of thought, whether linguistic, visual or otherwise. And “nature” is the word we give to the largest context, the most permeating materiality, the system of interrelated forces so complex, so enormous and so minute, so internal and external, that it extends far beyond the limitations of imagination and is, therefore, marvelous. This is Whitman’s “spear of summer grass.” But in an ecosystem poised at the brink of collapse, a world of drowning polar bears, disappearing bees, dying coral reefs and increasingly-intense weather events that kill tens of thousands of human beings at a time, our understanding of this system of systems is tinged with peril and fragility. As Robert Duncan says,

So does she arouse in us apocalypse
and in Nature the Furies stir.

“She” in this poem “Where the Fox of This Stench Sulks” is “my beloved Nation” gone missing, a nation that has lost its way. We all understand that the interaction of the political/social and the natural world is at the root of most environmental problems today; humanity’s impact alone, primarily that of industrialized societies, has put the earth’s environment in a dangerous state. And the relationship between the human and natural has been ingrained in our psyches for centuries as an adversarial one. But while each of us leaves footprints on the ecosystem, we always exist WITHIN it. After all, who is not a part of nature? We are all part of what Gary Snyder has called “one vast breathing body.”

There can be no doubt that nature, the context for our existence--as, for example, symbolized by the birds in Alfred Hitchcock’s film--not only cannot be controlled, but (if anthropomorphized) is pissed off. And there can be no doubt that it will have its way with our desires. But I find comfort in Duncan’s belief that

Phases of meaning in the soul may be like phases of the moon, and, though rationalists may contend against the imagination, all men [sic] may be one, for they have their source out of the same earth, mothered in one ocean and fathered in the light and heat of one sun that is not tranquil but rages between its energy that is a disorder seeking higher intensities and its fate or dream of perfection that is an order where all light, heat, being, movement, meaning and form, are consumed toward the cold.

Imagination is a deep connection with commonality, with the “one ocean” and “one sun.” We must learn to read natural systems more accurately, to listen with imagination to their direction.



These paintings represent an attempt to be guided visually and artistically by the imagination’s interaction with natural forms. Poetry is encoded within the forms of the world—one only has to look closely to see it. I have found that, once embedded in the paintings, the words to my own poems become something other than what I intended, as they are fragmented and redistributed. And the reader of the paintings has a much different experience than what I may have intended. The image guides.

I’ve also been guided artistically by a number of other forces—first and foremost, the flora and fauna of East Oakland (There’s more “there there” than you might think), the landscape paintings of Egon Schiele, the flora of the McIntyre Creek area of the Sequoia National Monument and the recent exhibit of Tonalist painters Arthur and Lucia Mathews at The Oakland Museum of California. Also, Basil King’s kind words of guidance have been very helpful.

Words of encouragement from friends have been incredibly important as well, especially (but not limited to) Steve Dickison who used images of my paintings on the Poetry Center calendar and website; my co-editors of 26, especially Elizabeth Robinson who suggested the use of my artwork for the cover of issue E; Susanne Dyckman who encouraged me to show my work at a backyard reading at her house last summer; Avery Burns (also co-editor of 26) who invited me to do this show and Andrew Joron and Rose Vekony who encouraged me to pursue my initial tenuous ideas. Finally I reserve special thanks for meu amor, Elisa, who is both my harshest critic and staunchest supporter.

Everything is nothing is everything,

Brian

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Thursday, April 19, 2007



This is one in a series of three. To see the other two--and other work not published here at Sorry Nature--come see my show at Canessa Park (708 Montgomery, SF) June 3-28.

Monday, April 16, 2007




A feast of poets from the literary journals Parthenon West Review and
Poetry International.

Readers include the contributors Denise Newman, Barbara Tomash, BRIAN STRANG,
Patrick Duggan, Chad Sweeney, David Holler, Ilya Kaminsky,
Bruce Boston, and Martin Woodside.
APRIL IS NATIONAL POETRY MONTH. HUZZAH.

DATE & TIME: Saturday, April 28 @ 7:30 PM

Admission: FREE

WHERE:
PEGASUS BOOKS DOWNTOWN
2349 Shattuck Avenue
Berkeley, CA 94704

CONTACT: Clay, (510) 649-1320, pegdowntown@sbcglobal.net

Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Thursday, February 08, 2007




"So does she arouse in us apocalypse/
and in Nature the Furies stir."
-Robert Duncan

Monday, January 22, 2007

2 FROM "ENDNOTE"




Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

NEW PAINTINGS. These will be on display at my reading on August 20th--email me if you want directions to or details about the event.




Thursday, June 22, 2006

IN THE MIDST OF SOMETHING HOLLOW



Text from "the confines":

"In a public toilet, a man with marks on his temples stands naked from the waist down. He scrapes at his legs with a razor, shaving away the insect hair and cutting himself badly. Inky rivulets run behind his knees.

Disposition is not a natural fact. You think that you are still in the midst of something hollow, associated with the grasping hand. Without end, you work in a field with nothing overhead."

"the confines" can be read at the ALICE BLUE website (link on right). Go to "archives" and see issue 2.

Wednesday, June 14, 2006

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

from "swimming."


"IT IS ALL THE SAME," 2nd half of the "blood motel" diptych. The poem "blood motel" can be read at ALICE BLUE (link on the right).


Thursday, May 04, 2006

"OF WHAT ARE YOU A COPY?" excerpt from "blood motel"




Tuesday, April 25, 2006

NO NEW IMAGES TODAY, JUST AN ANNOUNCEMENT:

Two readings hosted by The Poetry Center.
Both are Thursday, April 27th. 

*******************
Andrew Joron and Brian Strang
at The Poetry Center,
Humanities 512, San Francisco State University,
Thursday, April 27th, at 3:30pm,
free

Andrew Joron is author of several books of poetry, including Fathom (selected by the Village Voice as one of the "Top Books of 2003") and The Removes. Born and raised in Germany, he has translated a number of German poets and the Literary Essays of Utopian cultural critic Ernst Block (Stanford U. Press), and recently edited a festschrift for U.S. expatriate poet Gustav Sobin (for Talisman). He lives in Berkeley.

Brian Strang is the author of Incretion and i n v i s i b i l i t y (both Spuyten Duyvil), machinations (a free Duration ebook), normal school: hommage a beckett and A Draft of L Cavatinas: Letters to Ez (Potes and Poets). A coeditor of 26: A Journal of Poetry and Poetics, he lives in Oakland and teaches English composition at SFSU.

*******************************
26, a reading with editors Avery E.D. Burns, Rusty Morrison, Joseph Noble, Elizabeth Robinson and Brian Strang
at The Unitarian Center, 1187 Franklin, San Francisco,
Thursday, April 27th, at 7:30pm,
$5.

26: A Journal of Poetry and Poetics has been appearing out of the Bay Area over the past several years, a dense amalgam of poetry, essays in poetics and other writings, with its 5th issue ("E") due this April. Tonight we'll feature all of the magazine's poet/co-editors reading from their own writings, along with selections from the magazine that they've each found most generative and exceptional. This newest thick issue of 26 will feature a focus on poetry in translation and include a great deal of creative work ranging from contemporary Portuguese to Chinese poetry. On stage this evening will be Avery E.D. Burns, Joseph Noble, Elizabeth Robinson and Brian Strang.