Louisville Area Fiber and Textile Artists
“The Art Poetry Project” is a collaboration between LAFTA artists and local poets to create paired works of poetry and visual art. On this page you will see poetry that was written in response to art. Each poet selected a fiber, textile, or bead art that they were inspired to respond to in poetry form.
THE ARTISTS: The artists are members of Louisville Area Fiber and Textile Artists (LAFTA). Founded in 1995, LAFTA is an organization of visual artists, whose work encompasses a variety of surface design and construction techniques, focusing on fibers, textiles and beads. Our mission is to provide support to our members and to increase community awareness of fiber and textile art.
Click on the thumbnail to enlarge the work and read the poetry. You can navigate to the next art poetry selection by clicking on the arrow on the upper right of the screen.
Garden in the Round
Linda Satterlee-McFadin
I grew a garden once,
I designed it in the round.
I planted it with tomatoes,
cuc’s and all the zucchini I had found.
I watered it all summer
and pinched bad leave away.
The rewards I reaped from my garden
I remember to this day.
Green stalks and leaves shot to the sky,
Veggies grew galore
We ate salads from that garden
‘til the children begged “no more.”
When we finally had moved,
I was sad to let the garden go.
You see, I have no green thumb,
no more to grow plants just so.
I couldn’t repeat my success with plants,
I soon enough found
And so, must only remember that
lovely garden in the round.
Our Place
Linda Satterlee-McFadin
I am the one on the left, center
In my place
Do you see me? Probably Not.
I am not distinguishable, but,
That’s OK. I fit in. That’s good for me.
I don’t make waves,
I don’t complain,
I do my job day to day
I am dependable.
Let someone else seek glory, we need glory seekers
They have their place
Individuals, exhibitionists, out of the box thinkers
They create, invent, surmise, declare, resist, insist
People like me duplicate, but,
We are needed
to use those creations, inventions,
To make copies of them, to buy them
To be inspired by the cause
We have our place
When a battle has begun, we’ll fight, vote, chant, we’ll carry on
The indistinguishables, the common ones, there’s more of us
Safety in numbers, face in the crowd, one of the gang
We have our place,
Aren’t we all beautiful?!
Picasso’s Summer
Cara Caudill
What does summer owe to me? The sun
experiments with my eyes, my heart yearns
for the summer solstice. Or is it a summer
solace? Rose period. Watch as light speckles
through cracks and illuminates patches of
my life. What does summer owe to me and
how long will I have to wait to see it?
Seeds
Loraine Lawson
My grandmother planted seeds everywhere, and, each day, she softly inspected her sprouts, proud of their potential.
Her garden reached longer than her clapboard house, and burst with green beans, lettuce, tomatoes, corn, rhubarb, strawberries, zucchini: Every vegetable you could find on a Southern dinner plate grew there. She selected each one carefully before meals, serving the tomatoes fresh, the zucchinis fried, the green beans boiled with ham, as God intended.
Blooming bushes dotted the landscape all around the house under her tutelage. Azaleas exploded into lipstick pinks. Hydrangea sported their brilliant blue-white clusters beneath the shade. Need I say there were rose bushes, basking in the afternoon sun? And sinfully yellow forsythia splayed in the spring breeze, branches ever ready to be stripped into a switch for a wayward child.
Just beneath the roof of the front porch, flowers nestled in long wooden beds. These she checked while the dew was still fresh, her experienced fingers lifting them, her eye scrutinizing for any sign of infestation. Coral begonias spilled over their waxy leaves. Geraniums burned bright over their greenery. Impatiens, in all the silken colors of an exquisite summer ball, lounged, soaking up sprinkles of sunlight.
Inside her small farmhouse, African violets rooted in every room, their velvet purple blossoms defying the sullen black Bible sitting nearby. These, too, have their time in her presence. In the back, a glassed-in porch sported a mini-Jurassic period, bright light flooding in upon the cacti and aloe vera. Overhead, gigantic ferns and delicate morning glory greedily overflowed their baskets, drinking in the morning rays. She granted an audience to each, picking up pots to check dirt humidity or pinching off some beginning blight that threatens her Garden of Eden.
She loved the small things, the simple things, the seeds. Her love was consistent, humble, and kind. And in their way, didn’t they love her back by sustaining her body and her soul?
Sacred Seed
Dr. Elizabeth Best
We have been poured from the cosmic seed sack
of one Universal Mind,
and scattered upon winds of Love with care,
so our souls do not land on soils marked by lack
nor are we blindly assigned a space
where each of us cannot grow and bear.
We have been formed in the surrogate soil
of a mortal mother’s womb,
but not doomed to lie in oblivion.
From our genesis, we were each primed to toil,
chase the light hidden beyond the gloom
and mirror the act of creation.
Each of us sprouted from this human earth,
dust-blown and blasted with blight
and constantly stem towards ignorance.
We forget that from conception and after birth,
we are infused with immortal light
and have access to Divine guidance.
As sanctified shareholders of the Light,
each to a different degree.
Let us illumine this earthly bower,
stretch our tendrils, intoxicate and delight.
Let us brighten bleak hills and valleys,
root deeply in all soils, and flower.
We can pour out our love essences
over all trials and pains
that break hearts, numb minds and cripple spirits.
We can yield fruit that nourishes strong consciences,
ensure that mindfulness never wanes
and dispense balm to soothe away fears.
The so-called “least of us” can rise to great stature,
given our singular, seminal nature:
as flesh, we root within limitations of sod;
as souls, we are extensions of the Mind of God.
Moonlight Walk
by Kellie Arnold
Moon
Effervescent ripple
Quivering, illuminating, beckoning
Obediently you tie laces
Thundering, rippling,
gravitating
Torrential current
Pulls
Trees
Dark, unfriendly
Towering, laughing, mocking
You aren’t strong enough
Reaching, tunneling, losing
Small, Open
Path
Bootprints
scattered, unfollowed
Trekking, searching, longing
Quest for your self-discovery
forgotten, unwavering
Gone
The Ancient Calendar
Loraine Lawson
Days must have burned slow on the first calendars,
When time was New and
Humans still marked their moments by the sun and moon.
Perhaps this very calendar sat on a Mayan’s desk,
The azure lines a silent reminder that
There are seasons to change…
… crops to tend…
…rituals to oversee.
The ancient calendar is silent because it knows
There will be time for all these
Without setting an alarm for “just” 15 minutes or
Scheduling a “me-time” appointment.
The calendar keeps only the most important events
And yet there is still space for human life.
Back in the early days,
time … stretched … to accommodate …
All those little tasks that niggle us now,
such as lunch
or walking by the river
or letting children play.
All those things we’ll get to soon…
When technology stops meting out
Our time in microseconds,
Only to spit us out on
The other side of life’s days
Just as we realize what mortality really means.
Pig Newton
Eva Loraine Hammerbeck
A shadow, nothing more,
Darts across my windowed door.
A leaf, a twig, scraping there.
A squeak from my front porch chair.
I struggle to avoid a look
As I settle into my dreary book.
I am lost in reading when I hear
A sound so dreadful, so low, I fear.
I flip the outside bulb on
If someone was there, he’s gone.
I turn off the glaring light,
My house slips back into the night.
Tired, I’m tired. I shake my head.
Maybe it’s best to go to bed.
I mount the creaking stairs,
Each step, my aching back flares.
Once in bed, I embrace the dark.
See strips of moonbeams, so stark.
Soon I’m dozing, dozing off to dreams…
As something scurries across the beams.
Surely it is a mouse, I think
I turn, and, into my pillow, sink.
Then, I pause, to see what moves
“It’s nothing,” I firmly choose.
I am deep in my sleep
When a thing pounces from the deep!
I awaken suddenly, my eyes wide open
My repose, completely broken.
I cannot lift my arms, I find.
A figure lurks above me, outlined
Against the paleness of the moon
What fiend has visited me? I swoon.
When I come to,
As I soon do,
I hear a whirling grinding sound.
I find I’m hog-tied on the ground!
My tormentor is near
Every muffled movement I hear.
“Who are you?” I say at last.
“The time for talking is past.”
“What do you want?” I plea with him.
He laughs softly; I spy his limb,
Long, and hairy and bent
I know now whom hell has sent.
He mocks me from the shadows then
“Little pig, little pig, let me in.”
I see him, fierce with sharp teeth a-grin,
“Not by the hairs of my chinnie-chin-chin.”
Woman in White
Korinne Dunn
Proud chin, she holds the key
to her own damn purity.
She guards it with the same eyes
she uses to look down on you.
She is not made of lace,
she is not made of porcelain;
she wears these frills against
the cold.
She buttons her shawl against
the judgement.
She closes herself
to you
to find peace
from you.
Your Kiss
Dr. Elizabeth Best
I waited a life time for love to come home to me.
I thought that time was running out
and dying for love would be my destiny,
but Angel, here you are
wrapping love around my heart.
If what I believe is true,
Heaven isn’t only on the other side;
it’s right here where I am with you.
In any weather, my skies are blue.
Every season is summertime.
Earth rises up to greet me and you
and bells chime each time your lips meet mine.
Now that we are in touch like this,
I am sure Heaven isn’t only on the other side
as many presume it to be;
Heaven is wherever you are with me,
and the key that opens these portals of bliss
is your kiss.
Entrapped
Synthia Shelby
Lying beneath
A rubble of lies
My heart bleeds.
My soul dies.
Fear, manipulation,
And hatred served.
Do I deserve
To be treated
This way?
This disdain
I can never repay.
No power. No control
No passion. No heat.
Our love grows cold.
Naked, unraveled
By your need.
Trapped, caught,
No Longer, Free.
A knotted, painful
Web of deceit.
Fidelity a memory
In bed with a thief.
Mincing and dicing
My faith, my heart.
Trampling hope
Tearing it apart.
Tangled, twisted,
Wrapped around your finger.
Frozen by loneliness
I stay, I linger.
I yearn
To run away.
Your sweet words
Beckon me to stay.
Praying to the
One above.
Held hostage
By your love.
3 AM
Anderson Aven Cook
Twenty-nine years,
six months,
twenty-three days.
We measure our lives with an arbitrary creation.
A year, a month, a week,
a day, an hour, a second.
Our most precious commodity —
the one thing we can never get more of —
is an utter paradox
on which we have built history.
And yet I know no other way to mark
the passage of our time together.
Fifteen years,
one month,
nineteen days.
I measure out my life in harsh words rashly spoken
and broken promises laid to rest
in the softest gossamer whisper.
“I’m sorry” never quite cut it with us,
but “I love you” almost always did.
I measure my life in laugh lines
I never would have found
without you.
“You are too young” and “It won’t last”
became a metronome we learned to ignore,
finding a rhythm all our own.
I measure my life in the curvature of your smile,
your hand on my waist,
your fingers twined around my own.
Eleven years,
two months,
sixteen days.
You have safeguarded my heart,
and in the space between seconds,
I’ll always think of you.
My Aunt
Denise Amos
Dainty doilies on the buffet
Hand crocheted
Hails your hospitality
Skilled hands.
Stiff starched blouse buttoned high
Under wool blazer
Tucked into tailored skirt
Copy editor.
Plaid pedal pushers
Motorless push mower whirring
Side yard front yard backyard tiny yard
lickety-split trimmed.
Dungarees every fall, raking leaves
Leaves burning
Marshmallows roasting
Chili simmering.
Sunday dress
Ninth and O Baptist
“He makes all things new”
Spinster, married at 42.
Dress handmade
Saved for my first day of 10th grade
Instead
“She would have wanted you to wear yellow.
To share your sunshine, your smile,
with her friends.”
The fabric of our days
Together
A comedy blazing
of joy, memories, and life.
Elegance – For Charlotte
Kellie Arnold
The twirl of your skirt,
round and round,
Rainbow-fabric splayed open
is like thin sliced
fruit on the rim of
our drinks
during tea party afternoons.
There will be another time,
a different age
where your self-fascination,
chapstick-smeared practice grins,
the incessant dancing,
are labelled vanity.
But for now,
catch your breath,
untangle the sun-kissed curls
from your eyelashes
and rise up on tip toes
as the next performance begins.
Let your kettle drum heart
beat in rhythm with each spin.
Patterns of Comfort
By Mel Mellick
Life flourishing, blooming, bursting at the seams.
Pulsing, floating, undulating.
Give us comfort in this mad world.
Look to nature
Finding peace
In this patch of life
In full bloom
Foliage filling my textured heart.