Broadsided . Words on the Streets

QUESTIONS OF COLLABORATION

What is the experience of collaboration like? How do the artist and writer feel about the resulting Broadsided publication? To try and find answers, we have begun asking some simple questions to publish along with each Broadsided.

"In Livingston Parish, Dreaming of Li Po"
Poem by Alison Pelegrin, art by Cheryl Gross

Broadsided June 1, 2009



Poet: Alison Pelegrin

What did you think an artist would pick up on from your poem?
I can tell you what I feared—Southern Gothic Junkyard.

Did the visual artist refract any element of the poem that made you see the poem differently?
I have always thought of this poem as flippant and mildly humorous. The artist's image allows me to reflect on the serious elements in the poem.

What surprised you about this collaborative piece?
I was delighted and surprised by the two figures that appear to struggle in the boat.

Have you ever written work that has been inspired by visual art? What was that experience like for you? Why were you inspired to do so?
I viewed the Katrina paintings of Rolland Golden on display in the New Orleans Museum of Art and a few years ago as a guest at a private party. The museum was nearly empty and I was able to take my time experiencing the paintings. Other party guests were coming and going, and, in real life as well as in the poem, I found myself eavesdropping. Snippets of conversation wound up in my poem "Helicopter Hands," which is the title of one of Golden's paintings, though not the image I ended up writing about.

If you had to represent the Broadsided of "In Livingston Parish, Dreaming of Li Po" with one word, what would it be?
Adrift

Read any good books lately?
So many... I have loved Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout. I'm still working on 2666 by Roberto Bolano. Poets I am reading right now are Tara Bray, Adrian Blevins, Amy Lemmon, Pete Fairchild's latest.

Seen any good art lately?
In February I was in Chicago, where I had a chance to visit the Art Institute of Chicago on the day the "Becoming Edvard Munch" exhibit opened. While waiting my turn to enter, I was lost in Hopper's "Nighthawks." I am newly obsessed with the clay art of New Orleans artist Joy Gauss—I recently acquired two of her Mardi Gras Indians.

Anything else?
Thank you Liz for putting this together, and thank you Cheryl for your vision.

 

Artist: Cheryl Gross

What inspires you in this poem?
What inspired me the most was the fact that I was able to apply artwork [I'd created before ever reading the poem] and have it fit perfectly.

What surprised you about this piece, once you saw the artwork and poem together?
I found the two fit so well together visually.

When you begin a piece of visual work (or, if that's too broad, when you began this piece), is it color, shape, or some other aspect that you follow?
I keep design, color, and content in mind.

If you had to represent the Broadsided collaboration of "In Livingston Parish, Dreaming of Li Po" with one word, what would it be?
Perfection without intent. [The poem and art] were destined to be together like water and sand.

Read any good books lately?
And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks, by Kerouac and Burroughs. Brought me back to my old village days.

Seen any good art lately?
I look at art all the time. Recently stumbled on a web site called artists wanted.org. Some of the work is cutting edge.

Anything else?
What is wonderful is the connection between Broadsided and my work. It's also surprising. Usually I have to adjust my work to fit the writing. This was just such a perfect match, which doesn't happen very often.

 

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