2024 Art Contest Winner
Winter Trees
by Annaliese Bischoff Annaliese Bischoff - Winter Trees - Etching (hard ground with aquatint), 5" x7", 2023. I worked to capture the spirit in the landscape through multiple states of the zinc plate in acid baths.
Honorable MentionsMartha Brouwer - Consoled - This is painted in acrylic on a 30 x 40 inch canvas in 2012. I paint many different subjects depending on what interests me at the time. This piece was painted after the death of our son.
Sally Dillon - Aging Tulip - I photographed this tulip in my front yard, moments before a gust of wind blew off all the petals. Then I painted them on a wooden panel with acrylic paint, 24" x 24" in 2024.
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2024 Writing Contest WinnerStones of Wildwood Cemetery
By Ali de Groot Here am I, the inevitable and indomitable stone, the last earthly carving of a soul’s given name. I long for you just as you long for the distant spirit. Come to me when you can, and walk my walk, calm your talk. Come in the dark season, in times of few footprints, when my fluffed white blankets protect me. Oh, you think it cold! But to granite, marble or quartz, the snow is soft as angora, piling layer after layer, transforming my angles into curvy curves while a cardinal rests atop its frozen perch. Your steps come heavy, slow, or gliding like a skater as you plod or ski or slide through trails you cannot see but know are there. Come in the season of rain that washes me of dirt, gentle drizzle or slanted sheets, it is all the same anointment, sacred or not. In the heavy mud, bursting buds of color and seed, violets and bluets signal one month, azalea another, green kidskin leaves unfurl as the days warm. I feel the sun’s smile, hear your prayers, while puffed red robins sing hope to your heart. Come on the tail of daffodils, with sparrows and grasses, umbrellas of tree-hands embracing me and shading the light that grows and grows to new height. You, running faster now, with a dog leaping and leading the way Both eager to feel the earth and wind on your skin, just as when you saw first light within. Come in the time of crunching crisping maple and oak surrounding me in a regal cloak of crimson and gold. My companions, red-tail hawk by day and owl by night, they call to you as in the shin-high noisy leaves you tread. Come to clear your head and rake your worries into heaps to cast away. Come to me now. Days, months, seasons, or years no longer make a difference for I stand steadfast, awaiting your steps, awaiting a word, a pebble, two rivulets of tears, a silent curious gaze. Give me a nod, a memory to bridge the distance between you and me. Honorable MentionsHomage to Wildwood Cemetery
By Ira Bryck In a peaceful crowd in tranquil hills a bronze horse, survivor of theft and scrap forever honors poet Deborah Digges Next to Austin is beloved Susan one mile south, near town her beloved Emily all called back Edward Franke Leonard Wise in Counsel, Loyal in Friendship, Untiring in Achievement is Appreciated for the ages There’s the man who slammed his door as we disagreed about development eating while he spoke still a neighbor, oddly Lives forgotten but our streets have your names you built where we live you built it for us Buddha, who meditated in graveyards would have loved these benches and rural, parklike terrain conducive to remembering death When school let out, across the street my son avoided boring old Strong Street and blazed his way home via this blessed land. Years of life passing fertilizes soil and soul visitors breathe and feel a touch more solemn Appreciation life reminds us that it ends that reminds us not yet today is a good day to live. Morning Mourning By John Sheirer Rising before first light, quiet enough not to stir a sleeping dog. Four early season inches, wet and heavy like eyes that haven’t dried for a month. Snow shovel’s scrape barely resonates above the distant moan of muffled branches bending beneath a weight barely bearable. This driveway path is enough for now: jagged, black riverbed carved into white plateau, just wide enough for two big-booted feet and four small paws. Back inside, an empty space where her bed rested by a low window, the perfect view of falling snow. First snow since her death-- shoveling a path for no one. |