This began in central Turkey, visiting caves carved out of a volcanic earth called tuff, but seemed fitting for Easter. Monastic communities have lived in the Turkish caves for thousands of years and lots of them are still brightly painted. It's a shock to go into such alien houses and see such familiar images as George and the dragon, Mary and Jesus.
My cave
The painter’s preparing woad, cochineal and madder,
I’m getting the angels done at last.
Next door they have George and the serpent at the end of the bed,
Mark, Luke and John above
and Mary over the entrance.
They wake in the middle of their prayers.
I’m the fresco in my cave,
no prayer but me, my pile of habits, socks,
it’s as tiring as mixing yellow horse shit
with yellow earth for olive trees.
As the pigeons roost and swifts come out around the chapel top,
we climb and eat supper with the last supper,
sing to doves of doves,
walk with animals last seen in Eden.
Then it’s darker outside than in
and swifts turn to bats,
which fly in your hair and your mouth
as the devil does,
those with painted caves go inside
to see themselves in prayer.
CK
Saturday, 11 April 2009
Friday, 10 April 2009
Where man is not, nature is barren
To mark the recent decision to create a South Downs National Park, I've added a series of photos of man-made lines through British natural landscapes to Flickr. Intended as a celebration both of natural environments and straight lines, they include a castle moat, a pitch and putt and a boardwalk.
It would be great to make a significant collection of such photographs from across the country.
CK
It would be great to make a significant collection of such photographs from across the country.
CK
Thursday, 9 April 2009
The fancied image strays
I've asked several artists to respond to Blake with images. Joe Coppard provided a frontispiece on Tuesday; more from him later this week or next. The wonderful pictures below are Rob Gallagher's. Enjoy.

Maiden Cultural Illiteracy Surpriz'd & Avail'd of the Fruit of Presumptive, Deniable, and Unarticulated Knowledge by SE14, Allegorickally and Sinuously Incarnate

A newtonesque in various opacities

A 3/4 face
Rob commented:
All these images and more at Flickr.
CK

Maiden Cultural Illiteracy Surpriz'd & Avail'd of the Fruit of Presumptive, Deniable, and Unarticulated Knowledge by SE14, Allegorickally and Sinuously Incarnate

A newtonesque in various opacities

A 3/4 face
Rob commented:
Thinking roughly that if his figures tend to look gravity-bound and rigidly contained then blog-era counterparts might be more to do with porous borders, interimplication, weightlessness, atrophy, overlays, prostheses, whether Blake'd be happier about the existence of all these publishing tools than he would vexed by their immateriality and the question of who's supplying them, how and why...More Rob here.
All these images and more at Flickr.
CK
Wednesday, 8 April 2009
'I by force suddenly caught him in my arms
& flew westerly thro’ the night, till we were elevated above the earth’s shadow; then I flung him directly into the body of the sun: here I clothed myself in white’.
The Wilkins Ice Shelf is breaking away from Antarctica. New to the Wilkins Ice Shelf I looked for it on Google earth. The satellite image is from ten years ago, so it’s like looking at a star – you go back in time. Back then, it's difficult to see what's what, just white on white.
You can imagine apprentice mapmakers being given Antarctica to train on, as an easy way in: The white one down the bottom: tell us if it changes shape. The man thrown into the sun might have been a bad apprentice; his retribution climate-inspired.
The mapmaker's excuse
There are too many shades of white here.
White ice turns white-blue
and blue-white sea-ice turns white-grey-black with shadow as blocks crack away.
I’ve got to keep up with the whites of Wilkins, Bach, Larsen, George VI
and Wordie, which disappeared the other day,
each stuck to mainland ice with a white seam.
Which, in truth, would all be bearable if I didn’t hope for disaster
to show the clear lines of rock and sea.
CK
The Wilkins Ice Shelf is breaking away from Antarctica. New to the Wilkins Ice Shelf I looked for it on Google earth. The satellite image is from ten years ago, so it’s like looking at a star – you go back in time. Back then, it's difficult to see what's what, just white on white.
You can imagine apprentice mapmakers being given Antarctica to train on, as an easy way in: The white one down the bottom: tell us if it changes shape. The man thrown into the sun might have been a bad apprentice; his retribution climate-inspired.
The mapmaker's excuse
There are too many shades of white here.
White ice turns white-blue
and blue-white sea-ice turns white-grey-black with shadow as blocks crack away.
I’ve got to keep up with the whites of Wilkins, Bach, Larsen, George VI
and Wordie, which disappeared the other day,
each stuck to mainland ice with a white seam.
Which, in truth, would all be bearable if I didn’t hope for disaster
to show the clear lines of rock and sea.
CK
The marriage of heaven and hell

A while ago I saw this picture in an exhibition in London. It's from Sinai and shows little black devils lassoing monks off the heavenly ladder, with God waiting to receive those that make it to the top.
The monks are closely bunched together and rigid, which makes them look a lot like plastic penguins on a helter skelter toy. I remember looking through shop windows at the penguins crank up the hill, then skim around long blue slides back to the start. The movement was infinite.

What if heaven turns out to be a monotonous freefall of plastic slides? It's time to enjoy ourselves...
CK
Tuesday, 7 April 2009
Monday, 6 April 2009
Life delights in life
I have recently returned from Austin, Texas, where there are lots of bats and grackles.
The common grackle is a slim, blue-purple Icterid, with a fanned tail and yellow eyes. At dusk, certain trees in car parks (there are more of them than parks) sound like electricity, as if made from light-bulbs or an electric fence. The low buzz comes from a group of grackles, always difficult to see in the branches. So the sound is bodiless.
In mid-summer, 1.5 million Mexican free-tailed bats sleep under the sheer, pale Congress Bridge across the Colorado River, which locals call Town Lake. When I was there, just a few bats had yet come back from Mexico, where they winter. Black spots against grey, solitary bats are tricks of dusk: a part of the failing light rather than an animal. You never get a good look at them. They made the city feel expectant.
The grackle-tree and first few bats are delightful and unnerving. Noisy and alive and always to some degree hidden, out of shot. Right on the edge of what you can know by looking and listening.
CK
The common grackle is a slim, blue-purple Icterid, with a fanned tail and yellow eyes. At dusk, certain trees in car parks (there are more of them than parks) sound like electricity, as if made from light-bulbs or an electric fence. The low buzz comes from a group of grackles, always difficult to see in the branches. So the sound is bodiless.
In mid-summer, 1.5 million Mexican free-tailed bats sleep under the sheer, pale Congress Bridge across the Colorado River, which locals call Town Lake. When I was there, just a few bats had yet come back from Mexico, where they winter. Black spots against grey, solitary bats are tricks of dusk: a part of the failing light rather than an animal. You never get a good look at them. They made the city feel expectant.
The grackle-tree and first few bats are delightful and unnerving. Noisy and alive and always to some degree hidden, out of shot. Right on the edge of what you can know by looking and listening.
CK
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