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Chromapoetica

Chromapoetica

Apophenia and creativity in poetry

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The Great Book Caper » Writing Desk

7 Comments
November 4, 2011

Writing Desk 3
computer desk
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7 Comments:

  • hedgewitch's avatar
    hedgewitch
    November 4, 2011 at 1:02 pm

    Oh Anna, this is just overwhelmingly cool! I love your gorgeous writing desk, so loving decorated with icons(how appropriate) vessels and containers of beauty. I only made it through shelf 17 before I had to stop and comment about how I wish I could take so many of those tomes down and thumb through them. Your books are in much better shape than mine–my older ones (some of which go back to high school in the 60’s) were all bought used with a few exceptions, and age and being moved a million times by hands however loving, has taken its toll on them. But I love them nonetheless in all their bedragglement, even though they have that old musty pasty smell now. This is just so much fun–so glad you rose to Brendan’s and my bait and gave us this look into the world of chromapoesy, a chromacornucopia, as it were, of literary delight. Your notebooks and working materials in particular look so clean, neat and organized–the sign of a creative but disciplined mind, I’m sure. And there is no such thing as a ‘book problem’–only a ‘space problem.’ ;_)

    Reply
    • hedgewitch's avatar
      hedgewitch
      November 4, 2011 at 1:03 pm

      ‘lovingLY’ decorated…sigh

      Reply
      • Anna's avatar
        Anna Montgomery
        November 4, 2011 at 1:14 pm

        Only for you Joy :). I too wish you could look at them, they’re ever more exciting that way! It’s weird it stuck your comment here under the picture instead of at the main post. I didn’t know it could do that. Yes, I find the moving process the hardest (some of these books have moved 15 times or more). Oh, I forgot my collection of children’s books (those have been moved some 40+ times). Well, thankfully I don’ t have a space problem. I do enjoy my writing desk very much, my computer desk is on the next wall (under the giant window). It wasn’t fit for pictures this morning. I should post some time later my Underwood No 5 typewriter, you’d get a kick out of that. It’s for show.

        Reply
  • hedgewitch's avatar
    hedgewitch
    November 4, 2011 at 1:38 pm

    I bet it put it here because I enlarged the picture, was overwhelmed with the need to comment and just started writing. ;_) Apparently you can comment on individual photos, or something. I wish I still had my children’s books, especially my Childcraft Encyclopedia, where I read through every volume cover to cover. That’s where I read my first poem (The Highwayman, by Noyes) But books were not overly valued in my family, and they fell by the way. I still have some of my son’s old kid’s books, though, many of which I bought because they were personal faves. Wish I still had my old old copy of Wind in the Willows.

    Reply
    • Anna's avatar
      Anna Montgomery
      November 4, 2011 at 3:52 pm

      I’m so glad you enjoyed the pictures I sent of my Wind in the Willows book. If you notice all the notebooks are shut. If they were open you wouldn’t call them neat :). I make a big mess while creating but I have to clean it up as I successively work each draft until I have the immaculate printed copy filed neatly away. When I paint it looks like an explosion (I have hundreds of tubes of paint) then I clean it all up while I pondering what I’ve made and to be ready for the next big mess. So the point is my workspace either looks like this or chaos depending on what stage of the process I’m in :).

      Reply
  • Brendan's avatar
    Brendan
    November 5, 2011 at 3:07 am

    Thank you Anna! The profusion of arts revealed on your bookshelves is like the MRI that in 2003 finally revealed the mass in my left temporal lobe — probably congenital — that explained, at last, my seizure disorder. Your bookcase is a smoking gun for the range of your thought and poems. I think of all your “Chroma” websites as extrapolations of each of those shelves … the order of those shelves, too, somehow reflecting the ordering of those sites, and the “rage for order” that somehow holds the flukes of your poems (sometimes reading them I feel like I’m on mescaline and swimming). And you add to the one fixture of the writer — The Bookcase — that other, the Writing Desk, both as Relic and Altar (here) and the functional one (the one you didn’t show). When my dad dies, the only things I care to inherit from his house are some of his books and a monk’s table I’ve always used to study from on my visits to his house. And all those journals — do you keep a different one for each of the twelve modes of your expression? When i moved into this house 15 years ago, I lugged 30 boxes of books and papers; perhaps the main reason I care less to move than my wife is the thought of how many, many more boxes are now a part of that count … And finally, one thing these revelations of book-sanctums shows to me is how no collection can ever be complete — how I’ve lusted after titles I’ve seen on your shelves and Hedgewitch (that book on Chauvet looks, as they say in the parlance of porn, like a tiny hiney of a honey …) – Brendan

    Reply
    • Anna's avatar
      Anna Montgomery
      November 5, 2011 at 7:43 am

      You’re welcome, I was never encouraged in art as a young person so I suppose my art library is my own declaration of fascination as it were (12 shelves of catalogues, monographs, eclectic choices, outsider art, history, etc.). I could see these shelves as a smoking gun, though I have to add the internet for reference as I often read research articles that spark ideas. I hadn’t thought about the ‘rage for order’ but I see it, a response to all the disorder I was raised in. Also, it does help provide an outer border for the whirling of my mind which loves to draw from so many sources to create. I have a friend who’s a painter and her palette consists of 12 colors. She came to my studio and was floored to see hundreds of colors and many different types of materials. For her, everything she wants to say can be explored through the limited choice of those 12 colors (granted they can be combined into an exponential number of products). My creative process requires a larger scope of material in order to induce the experience you describe without the aid of psychedelic drugs :). I do try to keep the modes of expression organized but it’s somewhat of an aftereffect. Starting one thing leads to thoughts of another, composing gives insights into structure for writing and themes in painting inform essays, etc. I think my next peek behind the curtain will be the studio and music area (and the functional desk), along with my typewriter.

      Reply

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