Issue 9: | 15 August 2021 |
Commentary: | 1,974 words |
Footnotes: | 337 words |
I am driven by eclectic curiosity, and by the joy of juxtaposition. My work is a curiosity cabinet and an apothecary of magic potions and spells. It is poetry, and a surreal dream. It is the frantic pace of the city and the magnificent silence of the night. It is about love and death and the sacred and inane, and the absurdity and beauty in all things.
—Lorette C. Luzajic[1]
Her work is all that and more. It’s phenomenal. And the author herself is a magician, one might say, a Maestra of mixed media. Quite simply, I think Lorette C. Luzajic is amazing, an artistic powerhouse with apparently infinite reservoirs of creative energy. She is driven by “a volcanic passion” to create.[2]
Seems wondrous that one person is so accomplished:
In her review of Winter in June, poet Alarie Tennille writes this about Luzajic:
“I call her the Queen of Ekphrasis, but really she’s overqualified for the title.”[4]
No truer words, to distill an old proverb.
Personal Disclosure
In summer 2016, I first encountered The Ekphrastic Review and Luzajic’s remarkable work therein. You could say I’ve been an adoring subject/fan ever since.
During the ensuing five years, I’ve enjoyed the pleasure, honor, and privilege of publishing nearly two dozen of her prose poems and lyrical fictions, and eleven of her mixed-media paintings, across multiple issues of KYSO Flash and MacQueen’s Quinterly, including this one (see “Additional Reading” below*).
And I’ve bought and avidly read five of her books, including the pair whose covers are pictured above. They’re gorgeous. And among my most cherished collections of poetry. I bought physical copies, of course—to keep within arm’s reach of my computer. After all, reading (and rereading) onscreen doesn’t quite compare with the tactile delights of holding these books in your hands.
“Utterly drenched in duende”
Luzajic’s poetic prose in particular is mesmerizing to me and resonates deeply, especially on an intuitive and visceral level. My brain seems wired to experience literature and art and Life more emotively than rationally. In turn, it’s challenging for me to write critically about the works of favorite authors like Luzajic, to find any faults beyond a myriad of merits.
Happy to say, my online research shows that other folks have written more balanced evaluations of this exceptional artist’s work than I might have, while still showering that work with superlatives that it so richly deserves.
Among the accolades and endorsements, I serendipitously found a fascinating analysis by popular-culture curator Donald Brackett, which opens:...El duende is the spirit of evocation. It comes from inside as a physical/emotional response to art. It is what gives you chills, makes you smile or cry as a bodily reaction to an artistic performance that is particularly expressive.... The works of Lorette Luzajic, like those of Lorca himself, are utterly drenched in duende....[5]
In the first paragraph, Brackett also quotes from a statement by Lorca about the arrival of duende, which the Spanish poet described as “produc[ing] an almost religious enthusiasm.”
And in the second paragraph, Brackett notes,
“The Ekphrastic Review...is, as the title suggests, a poetry journal devoted to just this species of emotional reaction to visual stimulus.”
Amen, and bingo! He articulates a primary factor underlying the huge appeal of Luzajic’s literary journal and her ekphrastic writing—for me, and for many other folks I would imagine.
By the way, I highly recommend reading this fine review of Pretty Time Machine in its entirety, in part for Brackett’s description of the backstory to Luzajic’s “Shallow Lake,” a prose poem in response to Magritte’s painting Decalcomania.
And more-so for Brackett’s discussion of one of his favorites—“one of her best I believe”—Luzajic’s magnificent prose poem “The Encyclopedia of Obscure Shadows,” after The Dead Toreador by Edouard Manet:
The title of this piece alone is worthy of the great Fernando Pessoa, and it reminds me of what I enjoy so much about this kind of prose poem, a spirit also found in the raw and beautiful works of Robert Walser, Franz Kafka, Samuel Beckett, Elias Canetti, and certain short works by Robert Musil.... It is beyond mere exactitude and borders on sheer metaphysical bliss, it is trembling and shimmering, barely able to be sustained by the language on the page....[5]
The Queen of Collage
Luzajic is a master at evoking emotions and sensory impressions, not only through a range of media like paint, pastels, and pencil crayons (among dozens of others), but also via the colors and music of figurative language. A few lovely examples of the latter, from Winter in June:
“all dazzle and dangle, all shimmering ribbons and spangles” and “jetsam and jangle” (page 15: “Benedict and the Pomelo”)
“Blue is aching bright over the orchards, with handfuls of cellophane clouds close enough to touch” (page 38: “The Garden”; among my favorite pieces in the book)
“The air is full of saw dust and skunk and Jonamac must and the sugar of warm raspberries.” (page 60: “Barn”)
“Branwenn was a barely contained meteor, electric, neon, buzzing and sparking under all that funerary frippery she was buried in. All black in blazing colours.” (page 130: “The Neon Raven”)
“The ice is in the air, a swirl of crushed sapphires and black diamonds, brutal against your face.” (page 143: “Drowned World”)
I could happily devour writing like this every day from sunrise to sunset. And both books, Winter in June and Pretty Time Machine, are brimming with this kind of sensuous imagery.
The poet Alarie Tennille, mentioned earlier in this commentary, writes in her review of Pretty Time Machine about an epiphany she had while creating a list of themes she found in the book:
I realized the poems mirror Luzajic’s multimedia collages. They form an artistic juxtaposition of unexpected memories and symbols. Surprise! Surprise again!...[6]
The unexpected, yes. Another delightful aspect of Luzajic’s poems and stories and artworks.
The relentless drive to experiment through the years, to invent, to combine and recombine and juxtapose during the process of creating hundreds of mixed-media paintings also influences Luzajic’s writing. As she described in an interview last year:
In the same way I work to create titles or collage pieces for my visual artwork, song lyrics or snippets of dialogue can become elements of my poetry. ...I compile bits and pieces of imagery, text, and concepts from other creators and juxtapose them to form something new. This habit spills over into my writing, too.[7]
Just a few days ago, I stumbled across a small example: This marvelous prose poem from Winter in June includes a snippet,“dust and disarray,” which also appears in the lyrics of “The Fire Inside” by Bob Seger.
Our Daily Bread
after Tarde de Verano, Jose Basso (Chile) contemporary
The prairies are inside you, you are covered in dust and disarray, in clouds so close they are kissing the hay. The mares are tough and determined, like you, and resigned to their purpose. Well, I have always been a city mouse, even though I was born of the same bread. I wanted pavement and paintings, I wanted frosty tumblers of patio gin with crushed mint. I wanted red high heels and Barcelona. To each their own, you said, when I invited you to the city. I wanted to show you the museums and the world, but you said the whole world was under the dust right where you were. I was an old woman before I felt that kind of certainty and safety. That sense of where I stood. And if I gave a few portraits and poems to this planet, you gave us hefty, rustic loaves and cold beer. You cajoled the very earth to ignite on our behalf, to feed us.
Of course, poets have been incorporating ideas and phrases and lines from other sources for eons. It’s all part of the artistry. Which brings to mind the essay/confession “Stolen Kisses” by the beloved Steve Kowit, self-proclaimed “all-around, no-good troublemaker” (may he rest in peace).[8]
Researching the histories of appropriation and of collage arts is on my To-Do list for another day, given my need to wrap things up here and launch MacQ-9 to meet today’s deadline. For now, I’m quite content to think of Luzajic as the Queen of Collage.
And maybe even the Empress of Ekphrasis. After all, the whole world truly is her palette![9]
*Additional Reading:
I. Four ekphrastic pieces by Lorette C. Luzajic, here in MacQ-9:
II. An enlightening conversation between two poets/editors about ekphrastic writing and Pretty Time Machine in MacQ-2:
[Seven Questions About Process: An Interview With Lorette C. Luzajic] by Jordan Trethewey (March 2020)
Footnotes:
All links below were retrieved in August 2021.
is founding editor and publisher of MacQueen’s Quinterly and its predecessor literary and arts journal, KYSO Flash. And she served as webmaster and associate editor for Serving House Journal from its inception in January 2010 through its retirement in May 2018, after publishing 18 issues. She is among the co-editors of Steve Kowit: This Unspeakably Marvelous Life (Serving House Books, 2015), and the editor, designer, and publisher of 20 books for her KYSO Flash micro-press.
MacQueen serves on the Senior General Advisory Board for The Best Small Fictions, published by Sonder Press since 2019 (and by Braddock Avenue Books in 2018 and 2017). For the 2016 edition, published by Queen’s Ferry Press, she served as Assistant Editor, Domestic.
Her reviews appear in KYSO Flash, MacQueen’s Quinterly, and Serving House Journal; her short fiction, essays, and poetry have been published in Firstdraft, Bricolage, New Flash Fiction Review, Serving House Journal, and Skylark, among others; and her essays, anthologized in Best New Writing 2007 and Winter Tales II: Women on the Art of Aging (Serving House Books, 2012).
⚡
“No Succinct Summary Will Do Them Justice”, a review
by Clare MacQueen of A Cast-Iron Aeroplane That Can Actually Fly: Commentaries From
80 American Poets on Their Prose Poetry (edited by Peter Johnson); here in MacQ
(Issue 2, March 2020)
(Although her review is 99% positive, MacQueen points out that the book seems
to under-represent women prose poets. And she names Lorette C. Luzajic as one of
four women whose works she believes also belong in a definitive collection like
this one.)
⚡ The Fortune You Seek Lies in a Different Cookie, in New Flash Fiction Review (Issue 10, January 2018)
⚡ Tasting the New, a favorite small fiction from MacQueen’s writings, in Serving House Journal (Issue 1, Spring 2010)
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