Monday, June 14, 2010

Referential Magazine: Predatorium



in perfect timing with my recent journeys, one of my past travel images now became part of Referential Magazine: Predatorium - the photo is from a visit to Tampa Bay Aquarium, this trip took place a longer while ago, but the memory of that day is still fresh.

i still remember the moment in the photo: walking into a dimmed room, and seeing this huge green tank. silhouettes of children in front, their chatter, and beyond them, in the water: sharks. and yes, it's fascinating to be able to see them from so close a distance. but standing there, i couldn't escape this second emotion: that there also is something disturbing about the way we gather all species, remove them from their natural habitat, and put them in zoos, to be able to visit them - and to own them, those who aren't made to be owned. like the gulls in Scot Siegel's poem, they belong to the wilderness, while we are lost without all our tools and computers:

search-n-rescue is stuck in port and
the storm has taken out our main server

we are the deckhands with ghost faces
our wives have gone mad on the cape

gulls cry in the distance; they are innocent
and hungry

messengers of salt and soot in the storm, gulls

have no religion no deity
but believe in a higher disorder

this is a cut/paste, here the whole poem: "in the absence of stars tonight, gulls" by Scot Siegel.

the sharks appear in the poem, too - first under the surface of words, then directly out there, in 13, in interference with the gulls.

the gull poem itself is relates to the word "nets" in "13 Ways of Angels" by Scott Owens, and lead to "Our Possible Life" by Jonathan K Rice - which yet waits for a refering image (hint), and also brings this travel-induced journey of poems and images to full cirlce with its first stanza:

Perhaps it was
a travel brochure...

.

3 comments:

Scot Siegel said...

glad the conversation continues

Jessie Carty said...

Glad you are enjoying the journey as well. I loved the first literary magazine I did but working on Referential has been such a wonderful gift. It has been hard for me to take on additional editors but the work was getting to be too much. I hope to still be able to put a good eye on everything that is referred :)

Dorothee said...

yes, glad the conversation continues - it's one of the elements that makes Referential special, that it is like a floor with doors to artists and poets who come to meet through their work.