“Kandinsky’s Galaxy” appears at Strange Horizons

/ Monday, April 9th, 2012 / 1 Comment »

Kandinsky's last large painting, "Reciprocal Accord." One of the pieces I reference obliquely in "Kandinsky's Galaxy."Kandinsky’s Galaxy,” the latest and for now last of the poems in my Disturbing Muses series, has just appeared in the new issue of Strange Horizons. You can read it here.

I owe Strange Horizons Poetry Editor Sonya Taaffe for the existence of both this one and its recent predecessor “Carrington’s Ferry” — both for buying the poems, and for inspiring me to write them to begin with; in the case of Carrington’s, by direct request, and in the case of Kandinsky’s, through sheer enthusiasm. Sonya has long been a champion of this sequence … since even before the original Disturbing Muses collection came out in ’05. (Heck, she had a big hand in that existing, too.) Thank you, milady!

“Kandinsky’s Galaxy” is directly inspired by a 2009 visit to the Guggenheim in Manhattan, wherein I walked up the spiral through the truly jaw-dropping exhibition of the Russian master’s paintings from the beginning to the end of his life. It took me a long time, though (plus some encouragement from Sonya) to express what that experience planted in my head in a manner I was satisfied with.

One Comment

  1. Antonio Pérez Carballo says:

    Kandinsky’s compositions have always fascinated me, in particular his works of the Bauhaus period. I have often asked me about the cultural background behind these images. The reading of this book, now in Kindle format, has clarified me a lot of things. I would recommend it to the people who are interested in Kandinsky’s theoretical inspiration. Unfortunately, the title is only available in Spanish. Antonio Pérez Carballo
    “Kandinsky: los fundamentos del arte abstracto y su relación con las ciencias experimentales”. Luis López García, E-book, Amazon

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