Escalette Collection Ekphrasis Poetry Competition
August 27, 2024
During the Spring 2024 semester, the Escalette Collection of Art and the Department of English’s Creative Writing Program collaborated to host an Ekphrasis Poetry Competition. Undergraduate and graduate students were invited to submit ekphrasis poetry in any style inspired by artwork from the Escalette Collection on display in Smith Hall and Roosevelt Hall, the home of Wilkinson College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences.
The term ekphrasis has been used since at least the first century CE; the ancient Greeks originally used it as a rhetorical exercise for students, designed to practice descriptive writing. As a meeting of two mediums (verbal and visual), ekphrasis is vividly detailed, [re]creating an image with words. Ekphrasis poetry may narrate or reflect on the “story” presented in a work of art or expand its meaning through imagined connections or personal reflections.
We extend our heartfelt thanks to all the participants for their contributions to the Ekphrasis Poetry Competition, and we congratulate the two winners for their superb writing and engagement with the collection.
Tyler Edwards
Inspired by Color Farm Study by Lisa Sanditz
As Growth
a woman scatters seeds of
Curious Blue in neat rows
letting the soil embrace and calm them
so that one day, they will sprout like
Tulip Tree Orange with its citrus branches
and hearty trunks
towering over the other crops while
Tickle Me Pink laughs in the Florida sunlight
and digs its roots into the ground
refusing to wilt or fade, shying only to
Laser Yellow that boasts the brightest petals
and the sharpest thorns
swarmed by the bees who hate
Torch Red thanks to its layers of sap
that catch pests and prey
the only carnivorous color beside
Emerald Green which lures in moonlight
with a grandiose glint that is hard to ignore
for the woman who snags a handful of
Blossom Purple to make into tea
for her lover who watches from a distance
and admires her as
the colors grow
Keira Deer
Inspired by Olé by June Edmonds
in the unstomped measures
For Richard Garcia
after June Edmond’s painting, “Ole”
bravo the unhinged doors
& painted ladders
slumped wayward
against the wood-slat fence.
they lead me here, where
two guitars
cry pain
—finger-light whisper-touches—
echoes from strings
from mournful cavern
carved into smooth-grain body.
bravo the welcome.
bravo the world.
you lead me here, turn
in your seat, ask
do you know anything about
flamenco?
I say, nothing
nothing but
bravo.
bravo the crack of a heel
against the wooden tap-board,
the ruffle of a skirt hem
sweeping an arc like
the feathers of outstretched wings,
exotic birds raging
their pleats into the stitchwork
of our breath-held air.
bravo castanet shells
singing between
fingers & palms,
pink- & red-
painted lips that shout olé!
in the unstomped measures
of a New Mexican evening.
bravo Bernalillo.
bravo you.