
Agnes Martin
Desert, 1985
Pace Gallery
acrylic and pencil on canvas
182.9 × 182.9 Size (cm)72.0 × 72.0 Size (in)

Agnes Martin
Desert, 1985
Pace Gallery
acrylic and pencil on canvas
182.9 × 182.9 Size (cm)72.0 × 72.0 Size (in)

louise bourgeois

CY TWOMBLY, Light Flowers I (Gaeta), 2008, Color dry-print, 17 x 11 inches, 43.2 x 27.9 cm, Edition of 6 © 2012 Fondazione Nicola Del Roscio

jorie graham

Raoul Dufy (French, 1877-1953), Nature morte à la dinde [Still life with turkey]. Watercolour on paper laid down on card, 50 x 66.7 cm.
karen volkman
[…] I had found myself standing
in a ley of misnamed yellow
calla lilies thinking: That’s surely the shape
of the heart: open yet twisting
something strange, not at all delicate
at its core.
Last summer, kingfishers nested in the bank of the stream that flows down to the brook through South Wood. The marshy ground below the tall thin trees shone with kingcups. Bluebells on the higher slopes were a blue mist above the yellow. The tremulous shrill song of a kingfisher – as though it were breathing deeply in and out as it whistled – descended towards me through the wood and along the windings of the stream. Suddenly the kingfisher appeared in front of me, hovered, and flew silently back. In the green sunlight dappled on the water it gleamed like a luminous-sharded rain beetle. It had a glow-worm radiance, as though it were under water and sheathed in a bubble of silver air. It clouded the sun’s reflection with a streaming haze of emerald blue. Now it is slowly dying in the blind glare of the snow. Soon it will be sepulchred in the ice it cannot pierce, crushed into frozen light below the dark cave where it was born.
A fungus of whiteness grows upon the eye, and spreads along the nerves like pain.from The Peregrine, J.A. Baker.