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Saturday
Art: The Trumpeter by Artist G E Ely
"The Trumpeter"
G E Ely

Sunday
Art: In Front of the Class by Artist Cheryl Ann
"In Front of the Class"
Cheryl Ann

Monday
Art: UNSHEATHED by Artist C. k. Agathocleous
"UNSHEATHED"
C. k. Agathocleous

Tuesday
Art: Leda and the Swan by Artist Erika V Nelson
"Leda and the Swan"
Erika V Nelson

Wednesday
Art: the cup is red (lies we tell our children) by Artist Amie R Gillingham
"the cup is red (lies we tell our children)"
Amie R Gillingham
Juror's
Choice


Thursday
Art: Emily's Carriage by Artist April
"Emily's Carriage"
April
Member's
Choice


Friday
Art: Never Really Gone by Artist KiniArt
"Never Really Gone"
KiniArt

Art of the Day: 09/15/2005
This Week's Theme:   Poetry
 

"3 Poets: Dickinson, Poe & cummings" is the title of one of EBSQ's September exhibitions. It is not, however, the first show EBSQ has done with poetry as it's theme. In September 2002, the members of EBSQ Plus participated in "Conversations With Dead Poets." This week Art Of The Day features some of those works.

-Melissa Morton

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"Emily's Carriage"

Art: Emily's Carriage by Artist April
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(Detail Image)

Detail Image

  
 
 
Media:  Oil on Canvas
Dimensions:  18 x 24

Winner
Member's Choice

Based on the poem "Because I could not stop for Death" by Emily Dickinson, this painting attempts to bring Dickinson and her poetry into today's world of pop culture by placing her, not in a horse drawn carriage, but in a vintage checker cab. Also in the cab are William Shakespeare and Jack Kerouac, representing different periods of poetry, both classics, and on the cutting edge of thier time. The figures and interior of the cab are black and white while the exterior is in color, a contrast between the present (outer) and past (within,) though the characters still exist to a certain extent (though thier "color" is gone) on thier own plane within. The carraige drives out of the picture plane at sunset, representing the physical deaths of the poets, the somwhat slower and incomplete deaths of thier genres, and the seeming death of poetry itself in current popular culture.

April A. Fontaine is a self-taught artist living in rural New England, USA.

**Because I could not stop for Death -- Because I could not stop for Death -- He kindly stopped for me -- The Carriage held but just Ourselves -- And Immortality. We slowly drove -- He knew no haste And I had put away My labor and my leisure too, For His Civility -- We passed the School, where Children strove At Recess -- in the Ring -- We passed the Fields of Gazing Grain -- We passed the Setting Sun -- Or rather -- He passed Us -- The Dews drew quivering and chill -- For only Gossamer, my Gown -- My Tippet -- only Tulle -- We paused before a House that seemed A Swelling of the Ground -- The Roof was scarcely visible -- The Cornice -- in the Ground -- Since then -- 'tis Centuries -- and yet Feels shorter than the Day I first surmised the Horses' Heads Were toward Eternity --**

Artist:
April  
USA
EBSQ Plus Juried ArtistShow Awards Winner - see the art
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     2003          2004          2005          2006          2007          2008          2009     
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< Prior Item                  Item 650 of 2181                  Next Item >