The Importance of Walking in Poetry: Part 4 of 4

I’m immersed in the life and work of Andrzej Jan Wroblewski, a Polish designer who grew up in the Soviet era Eastern bloc, going to the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw in the 50’s. After the Cold War defrosted a bit, this miraculous person travelled to see France, Germany, Switzerland, and Italy in 1958. Within a decade of that, Wroblewski won a Ford Foundation fellowship to spend time studying art in New York. Although he began with sculpture and photography, this artist made his mark in design. He built and strengthened departments of industrial design in both Warsaw and in the US, serving as Dean in both instances.

Image featured in this poster is of Andrzej Jan Wroblewski’s Opus-6, a recreation of Opus-5 created in 1978. This work of art allows the audience to interact with a moving plate positioned beneath a pen, creating patterns that can never be repeated and which manifest, in images, principles of physics put in motion by the participating audience member.

I’m prepared to drive to Vancouver tomorrow to interview Wroblewski concerning his current solo exhibition at the Center for International Contemporary Art. While I knew a little bit about design heading into this project, what fills my head now are philosophical and practical applications of this most practical of art disciplines. How does a designer read the world, how do signs constellate Wroblewski’s world, and how does he create meaning from what he reads in everyday life and society?

Cities are systems of information. We read the signs in order to live, survive, optimise, thrive, and create meaning.

Which brings me to our series on The Importance of Walking in Poetry. I started this series back in December of last year, when our first snows were falling. Today it’s snowing again, probably our last, all these big globs of snow prancing down to plop on the earth, blanketing particulars of a nascent spring. Part 1 was on observation, Part 2 on inspiration, and Part 3 on rumination. Today we’re talking about reading, and I want to dwell on reading as a way of living and moving in the world, not just what we do with books.

I shall try and get out for a walk today, as should you. I recommend a good browse, both before and after your walk today, through the Igneus Bookshop. There you’ll find over three decades of collectibles by masters of poetry and existence by authors such as Julia Wendell and S. Stephanie, writers who have done more than their fair share of rumination, digesting the very difficult to digest grasses of life and politics, alchemizing realisations in stanzas and lines of poetry.

The four main ways in which walking helps to read and write poetry are:

Observation

Inspiration

Rumination

Reading

We’ve talked about how taking a longish walk can clear our mind and move us into a mode of pure observation. Then we feel inspired, or filled with spirit (natural, human, and celestial). German philosopher Immanuel Kant spoke of aesthetic observation as that which untethers our rational mind and gives free rein to imagination. It can be more simple than that. As we turn a corner in a forest, we may notice how the light slants differently upon a broken white birch, or how the quickest leaves to un-sheath and grow are those that receive full sunlight for most of the day. We begin to form relationships between things, such as light and spatial position, or between growth and seasons. We begin to build patterns and structures that represent our world to us. Then we internalise these representations, building out our inner-world.

All of nature, indeed the whole world, is a book laid open for us to read.

All of nature, indeed the whole world, is a book laid open for us to read. Walking through nature, there is a reset that happens. Built environments of home, workplace, and store are left behind. We experience a purity and simplicity only nature can provide. Some of us, surely, will be walking through cities, or through town centers. The key to this kind of walking is to let go of purpose, will, and obsessive thought. Allow our mind to rest, and new information will present itself in harmony with our inner-world.

There was a group of Parisian social activist artists and thinkers known as the Situationist International (SI), represented to most of us today by Guy Debord. The group was active in the 1950’s and 60’s, and their main thing, their main activism consisted in the act of walking. They took long long long walks, known as dérives, through Paris at night. They’d walk with no plan in mind, the only thing they expended effort on was to try and be sensitive to the city streets, themselves. To hear the streets, feel and touch the walls and curbs, with their fingers and feet, but also with their soul.

A mysterious thing would happen, and they would find their feet turning in one of two directions.

When a member of this group came to a cross roads, they took a moment to observe, be inspired, and to ruminate upon what they saw and felt inspired by. A mysterious thing would happen, and they would find their feet turning in one of two directions. What caused them to take a right by the Seine, and not a left? It may have been a piece of wood floating towards the bank, it may have been a cat which flit behind a lamppost. The wood, cat, lamppost, and the moon’s shadow were signs to read, like in a book or a map, and the SI members moved their body through the pages of a book they knew of as Paris, the book of their life.

We, too, can walk through our city, our life, and learn to read signs. In doing so, meaning and storylines will bear relevance to our own lives, offering something a bit more vital than news headlines and fragmented stories flickering through our Netflix night.

The title of Andrzej Jon Wrobleski’s exhibition is Unseen Forces of Nature in Art and Design, and each artwork on display reflects a moment in the artist’s reading of both art and life. His work in industrial design may surprise many art enthusiasts in the West, who see artistic beauty as free from function (art for art’s sake). I think there’s a place for this, if only to wrest art away from the prying hands of our times. There is something timeless about art, something which serves eternity, and infinity, and shouldn’t be limited by what kind of technological needs we have, or what kinds of social issues the politicians are saying we should care about today, or even what social needs community advocates are demanding art serve.

Art for Art’s Sake can also serve the needs of people.

However, there are some creative souls who can do both. Wrobleski, for example, understands the multi-dimensionality of art. While creating an object that may be used for industry or travelling on business, he wants the object to not only fulfil its function, but to resonate with the other signs of our world in such as way as to allow us flights of fancy, or imagination. Good design responds to natural forces in ways which lift the parameters of our mind for just long enough to allow in new light and vision.

Systems of signs are like forests, with roots sunk low and labyrinthine

Systems of signs are like forests, with roots sunk low and labyrinthine, and tall canopies which soak up the nuance of light. Taking a walk through the world, in built as well as unbuilt environments, allows time to slow down, allowing us and encouraging us to observe, be inspired, ruminate, and to read our lives for meaning we may not otherwise divulge.

Speaking of reading, the Igneus bookstore offers decades of observation, inspiration, rumination, and ways of reading. Take a few moments to browse our library. Each title offers one free poem, so you can get a sense of how each poet uses the languages in an effort to reach out and change your life for the better.

Richard Martin Review of “Gold Vein Lightning: New & Selected Poems,” by William Kemmett

Review by Richard Martin

Gold Vein Lightning
New & Selected Poems
William Kemmett
Igneus Press (2020)

www.igneuspress.com

98 pages $15.00

Recently, I decided to shut off and block all sources of corporate media lashing my mind by way of 24-hour news cycles. The information and disinformation simply overloaded the circuits of my mind, body and soul. I began to feel encased in the lead of what was wrong with everything. It wasn’t I was in denial of disasters and the Armageddon of the next moment, and thus, should accept a lead suit without complaint. And I was fully aware of the ironic nightmare possessing America, i.e., everything from rigged political campaigns to the initiation of the Sixth Extinction were said to be hoaxes by the Master of the Hoax, the President of the United States. But like Joyce attempting to wake up from the nightmare of history, I wanted to awaken from the present instalment of it. I hoped for a phenomenal epiphany.

As fortune dictated, I began reading William Kemmett’s latest book, Gold Vein Lightning – New and Selected Poems (Igneus Press, 2020). Kemmett wasted no time in melting my lead attire with his electric poems. In the first and title poem of the collection, “Gold Vein Lightning,” he writes:

It’s a fraction
        longer than a crack
                across the sky –
a bolt split a rock
      on the side of the
              hill and turned
lead into gold.
       There are things
               you just know.

Kemmett is a reservoir of knowing things. Like an alchemist who roasted lead with gold to produce spirit and understood “unus mundus” to be the non-differentiated unity of being, Kemmett offers this to brew in Behold Every Creature:

                 The gift of day; 
                  a field of crickets
                 orchestrates one string
                 of many notes.

                Distance punches holes where
                         there are no holes and map
                the sky for Lesser Beings  
                         like myself who can’t sing
                praises to the stars.

From the very first poems in the book, Kemmett’s verbal lightning struck deeply in me. Large sheaths of lead crashed to the floor. As I lugged them to the trash, they were heavy, bulky and awkward. A neighbor, blasting leaves into a purposeless dance with a leaf blower, calmed his machine to ask about the pile of lead in my arms, and had I lost a few pounds. Maybe, the Keto or South Beach Diet had paid the advertised results. I could only respond: “my nation is hungry/for green emeralds and mystical/sapphires, Li Po’s river/of stars.” (“The People’s Poem,” p.17). He shook his head and said: “Now ain’t that the truth.”

Lightning across the sky assumes many shapes and forms, and Kemmett’s poems were no different in terms of presentation on the page. The august beauty of his language and choice of words glowed in appropriate forms to their phrasing. As my body continued to exfoliate my leaden condition, I enjoyed his poems centered on family and humorous insights gleaned from imagination and experience or encounters with others: a lonely woman with a pet spider buys a deluxe model of the bible in the “The Bible Salesman”; a bather’s hasty escort from an ocean beach after offering a young sun worshipper a sardine: “Sardines! I shout back/through a hail of rocks and beer bottles.” (“Sardines,” p.31); and a trip to Home Depot in “Imagining the Worse”:

                 So, it’s come to this –
                 not until the light
                 through the garden section
                 at Home Depot do I notice
                 I’m wearing mismatched sandals.

                                  Am I fugitive
                                  from one of the nursing homes
                                  in Florida?

Throughout the collection, I was engrossed by the way Kemmett’s poems were stewards of the earth with their close observation, grace, magic, mysticism and wisdom as in Citrix X Paradisi:

                      I’m in a state of grace:
                               the lime tree I planted has
                      decided to root and defy
                               the citrus canker that preys
                      on bad grafting.

The gold vein lightning of William Kemmett’s poetry demolished my encasement in lead and suspended the “canker” of the present moment in history. This is an outstanding achievement, and especially relevant for anyone who happens to be a man or woman in a grey, lead suit within a grey, leaden culture. Kemmett sings through his poetry the world is immediately and always before our senses and intellect. It is there as pulse, energy and uncompromising openness. It is forever new and mysterious and cannot be reduced to sound bits and pointless partisanship. The transcendent world – in being there – inhibits us, waiting for us to witness it. Gold Vein Lighting – New and Selected Poems offers a way.

Please note: I would be remiss in not applauding the clean and refreshing design of Igneus Press books under the guidance of publisher, Peter Kidd, a lightning force in his own right. Graphic Details of Portsmouth, New Hampshire and S. Stephanie designed Gold Vein Lighting – New and Selected Poems for Igneus Press. Their design reflects the authenticity of William Kemmett’s poetry. The maroon cover with gold lettering is elegant and foreshadows the lightning strikes to come.

Richard Martin writes poetry and fiction. His forthcoming book, Ceremony of the Unknown (Spuyten Duyvil, 2020) will be available in the spring. His latest chapbook from Igneus Press is Cosmic Sandbox.