Saltar para o conteúdo
    • Notícias
    • Desporto
    • Televisão
    • Rádio
    • RTP Play
    • RTP Palco
    • Zigzag Play
    • RTP Ensina
    • RTP Arquivos
RTP Açores
  • Informação
  • Legislativas 2025
  • Antena 1 Açores
  • Desporto
  • Programação
  • + RTP Açores
    Contactos

NO AR
Este conteúdo fez parte do "Blogue Comunidades", que se encontra descontinuado. A publicação é da responsabilidade dos seus autores.
Imagem de “The Lavender Fields” (4/4)
Comunidades 27 jan, 2010, 18:59

“The Lavender Fields” (4/4)

Art Coelho

 

        The canvas below is a favorite of those who walk through my Seven Buffaloes Studio here in Big Timber.

"The Lavender Fields" (4/4)
                                              The Lavender Fields  Art Coelho ©

        The Lavender Fields represents a change in my work.  Especially in the sense of how European landscapes dominate my major work.  I’ve done more canvases on Provence, this small region in Southern France, than I have done in all of my American paintings combined.  Maybe my soul has an Old World culture thriving in it. This began when I started painting Azorean canvases in 1982 when João Afonso, the Terceira poet and scholar sent me my first color photography books of the Azores.
        There’s not much of any of my work, maybe none of it, which connects to these modern times.  For instance if I found something Twentieth Century appearing in one of my photographic models of my canvases on Provence, I’d weed it out immediately.  I like the innocence of landscape and the feelings workers have towards their labor, which has nothing do with modern machinery or modern tools.  Anything mechanized in my rural scenes is taboo.  There better be a horse pulling a harvester or a hand scythe somewhere or the subject matter becomes dead in my spirit.  In this regard you can look at a Vincent Van Gogh painting-the last one he did just before he died was in 1890; and my work timeframe wise fits into that 19th century ambiance.  I have coined a phrase that fits the men and the women who have sweat pouring from their brows when they are hard at their toiling in the fields or vineyards.  I call it The Sweating Professions.
        The poem Vincent, a Gladiator of Soul is another kind of homage.  I was more inspired to write about Van Gogh in Provence than at any other time.  Because here both his chosen world to paint in, and his human condition collided; left him more tragically exposed.  And after he did his last painting, Black Crows over a Wheat Field, he went home, put a pistol to his gut, shot himself, took out his pipe and smoked it till his brother Theo arrived on a train from Paris.  Theo was the only wanted who supported him financially and spiritually in his lifetime; and he died six months later. 

                         Vincent, a Gladiator of Soul
                              (for Vincent Van Gogh)

 

                           Vincent’s wall distills
                           a forgotten cell inside
                           St-Paul-de-Mausole’s sanctuary;
                           the final dust that haunts
                           his barred windows where
                           irises once soared
                           for inspiration
                           in a captured spirit
                           splitting hairs of madness.

                           His heart reached
                           for brush tips in
                           a speck of eternity,
                           a gladiator of soul.
                           Truth on its knees
                           with no one to please
                           but himself, or maybe
                           a seasoned bar whore,
                           or a little girl
                           with a red ribbon
                           in the garden posing
                           with an immortality
                           she never knew possible.
                           Or sunflowers leaving
                           him speechless. An old
                           pairs of shoes, the
                           humility that drives
                           one beyond for grace.

                           It’s all there where
                           courage’s price of color
                           can never honestly erase
                           a song a planter surrounds;
                           the light bursting like
                           a lamb’s eyes glowing
                           with the sun’s gold for
                           every whim-blessed floundering
                           of pride’s commitment to sow.

                           The olive groves
                           take torment’s roots
                           to a survivor’s clutching
                           hand to somehow last;
                           the mistral dance blew
                           hard as his torn ear
                           against isolation’s rasp.

                           The double-timing ghosts
                           blowing sideways taps
                           at the seams without
                           one smile from sorrow,
                           except in a peasant’s eyes.

                           And rolling ripe as wheat
                           his palette speaks
                           the solitude of all creation,
                           a man’s crossed arms that weeps.

                                                          
                                                     (Unpublished poem)

Art Coelho
January 2010

 

artcoelho@cablemt.net    www.artcoelho.com
P.O. Box 249, Big Timber, Montana   59011 

RTP Play Promo
PUB
RTP Açores

Siga-nos nas redes sociais

Siga-nos nas redes sociais

  • Aceder ao Facebook da RTP Açores
  • Aceder ao Instagram da RTP Açores

Instale a aplicação RTP Play

  • Descarregar a aplicação RTP Play da Apple Store
  • Descarregar a aplicação RTP Play do Google Play
  • Programação
  • Contactos
Logo RTP RTP
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
  • flickr
    • NOTÍCIAS

    • DESPORTO

    • TELEVISÃO

    • RÁDIO

    • RTP ARQUIVOS

    • RTP Ensina

    • RTP PLAY

      • EM DIRETO
      • REVER PROGRAMAS
    • CONCURSOS

      • Perguntas frequentes
      • Contactos
    • CONTACTOS

    • Provedora do Telespectador

    • Provedora do Ouvinte

    • ACESSIBILIDADES

    • Satélites

    • A EMPRESA

    • CONSELHO GERAL INDEPENDENTE

    • CONSELHO DE OPINIÃO

    • CONTRATO DE CONCESSÃO DO SERVIÇO PÚBLICO DE RÁDIO E TELEVISÃO

    • RGPD

      • Gestão das definições de Cookies
Política de Privacidade | Política de Cookies | Termos e Condições | Publicidade
© RTP, Rádio e Televisão de Portugal 2025