Two Paintings

Did you notice that I changed the picture above? It used to be a drawing Kendrick made of me, with a green background. Now it's John William Waterhouse's painting of Miranda from The Tempest. I have to admit, I chose it because I thought Miranda looked a little like me, with the red hair and her profile at that angle. I sort of have that nose.


But I also liked the picture of the ship that is so obviously breaking up in the distance. You see, it looks like a disaster. It looks as though the ship is going down, and everyone on it is going to perish. But we know that's not what's going to happen. This isn't the end of the story but the beginning. Miranda is looking at the brave new world she's going to discover, a world with narrative in it. A world in which she will be able to act, after a period of statis.


I liked that. And so I chose the painting as my icon of sorts. I thought it went well with the green background, which is a William Morris design from the same era. What do you think? Is it too busy for my website? Or is it an improvement? I keep looking at it, trying to decide.


Here's the entire painting, in case you wanted to know what it looks like:



I mentioned the other website I created this weekend, Poems of the Fantastic and Macabre. For that website, I chose a different Waterhouse painting, one of the sirens singing to Odysseus. That makes sense thematically too, right? Because singing has always been used as a metaphor for poetry, which started in song, and the sirens are also frightening – as poetry sometimes is, because it has such power to allure and alter us. So the sirens are both fantastical and macabre. Here is that painting, in case you wanted to see the whole thing:



Aren't they beautiful? I get so much out of art from this particular period. I'm not sure why, but it makes me feel – more alive, more imaginative, more creative. Sort of Paterian, actually!



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Published on January 22, 2011 19:06
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