Friday, 9 December 2011

Field of Light


At a recent workshop at The Haven, Hereford, we used the theme of "Lights" as our starting point. 



Bruce Munro’s Field of Light at the Holburne Museum, Bath. Winter 2011.
The seed for Bruce Munro's inspiration to create this artwork was planted nearly twenty years ago while travelling in Australia. He became transfixed by the way in which the barren dessert would burst into bloom after rainfall. Field of Light too lies dormant during the hours of day light, but when darkness falls the bulbs flower with gentle rhythms of light and patterns of colour.


 We thought that Bruce Munro's installation looked amazing and used the title as a starting point.

Field of Light

Flickering flames before my eyes
Make sure that the fire will not die
I’ll try with all my might to maintain this field of light
Dancing jewels upon the sea
Bouncing boats all afloat
Sunlight just right
I’ll try will all my might to maintain this field of light

The flowers stand in colourful perfusion
Giving the illusion
Of a carpet that can float away
Let it stay it’s my field of light

The stage is lit with pools of light, let’s hope the performers get it right and blossom in my field of light
Most of all, in the darkest times when the clock chimes
the midnight hour a New Year brings forth
the light and surrounds us all with the hope for the year to come.  This is my field of light.
Shining out above it all is the light that friendships bring and the happiness that begins all framed by those that care. That’s my real field of light.

Yvette Sutton 





Monday, 3 October 2011

Golden October



 
SEGMENTS is back!  Ledbury Poetry Festival has kindly given funding for 6 more monthly sessions and the next workshop will be on
MONDAY NOVEMBER 7th - as usual these sessions are free and open to all.
9.45am to 12 noon at Museum Resource & Learning Centre, Friars Street, Hereford. HR4 OAS.
Will the help of the wonderful MRLC staff we will have objects from the collection to inspire us, and as if that isn't enough, there will also be poetry and cake. As before there will be a theme for each stand-alone workshop and if Catherine can find the time (she is so very busy, as everyone with a proper job seems to be) she may come along to fill us in on the history and context of the objects after we've played with our imaginations.
So if you want a place please let me know as numbers will be limited.   New people are especially welcome. 

 
 

 A half day taster workshop will take place at the Haven in Hereford, 37 St Owen Street, Hereford, HR1 2JB.  Tel 01432 361061
FRIDAY 2nd DECEMBER  from 10am to 12.30 in The Rose Room.  £6 suggested donation. Open to all.
The theme will be "Lights" and we will have a mix of poems, quotations and music to start us off. (Yes, there will be cake too!)
If there is enough interest we will start a new series of writing workshops at the Haven starting late January 2012.
Please let me or The Haven know if you would like to reserve a place for 2nd December.   
Sally

 
Autumn Doggerel


Conkers only shine for a day
We pick them up as they fall and say
That’s a good one

Let’s gather up each day as it falls
Shine it on our sleeve and say
This is a good one

Some things only shine for a day
Before Time takes their gloss away
So gather ye conkers while ye may









Wednesday, 14 September 2011

The September Issue

Creative Words for Wellbeing
Sally Givertz

This complementary therapy uses creative writing and creative thinking to help you to gain a stronger sense of identity and direction in your life.

HOW?
Through discussion of poems and prose, objects and pictures (chosen to suit your agenda) you can begin to see things differently, make new connections and enjoy freedom of expression.  This often leads to a renewed feeling of energy and excitement about life’s possibilities.

No great literary skills are needed and spelling and grammar aren’t important. But expressing yourself on paper is; the written word gives us time to think.
Speech is swift and rarely consciously considered. Writing can be considered, revised and sourced from a deeper level of the mind.

Typically writers will say:
“I don’t know where that came from.”
“I didn’t know I felt like that.”
  
In a session we will discuss writing, objects and pictures that are relevant to you.  We will choose these together but to start with I can give you plenty to work with.   Much of your own writing will probably be done between sessions once we have generated ideas between us. 

Ideally a session gives you time and space in which to think and to be yourself.
Creativity is an enjoyable and liberating process and although we don’t avoid the dark side of life we also focus on the light.   The skills you learn can be used between sessions and long afterwards.



  



A word about poetry
Those of us who work with poetry believe it can be a powerful and relevant force.  Both the reading and writing of poetry are creative acts and therefore transformational. It can help us to choose clarity over confusion and feel more powerful and focused.  It can offer us a fresh approach and new insights.  Poetry is a force to be reckoned with. 

..the imaginative transformation of human life is the means by which we can most truly grasp and comprehend it”
Seamus Heaney - The Redress of Poetry


from Lies
 Jo Shapcott

 In reality, sheep are brave, enlightened
 and sassy. They are walking clouds
 and like clouds have forgotten
 how to jump. As lambs they knew.











 A
fter some years of running groups I am now focusing on working more with individuals.
I am a writer and complementary therapist working with creative writing and creative thinking to improve wellbeing.


For the past few years I have managed the springboard project for Ledbury Poetry Festival’s community programme; have had a long working association with Herefordshire Mind, Breast Cancer Haven in Hereford, and many other working partnerships.

I am a member of Lapidus, Arts and Health South West and The Poetry Society.

I practise at:
The Haven, 37 St Owen Street, Hereford, HR1 2JB
and
35 The Gresleys, Ross on Wye, HR9 5JN

Hourly rates - £35 Hereford   £30 Ross on Wye

Please get in touch if you'd like to know more. t 01989 563370  m.07779 083510


At the ancient pond
a frog plunges into
the sound of water

Basho (1644-1694)
(translator -  Sam Hamill)

Sunday, 31 July 2011

A change of direction


As some of you already know I have decided to make some changes in the way I work. I have loved these last few years working with groups and meeting so many wonderful people but I now feel the need to regenerate. 
So from September I will be working with individuals - still offering creative writing and creative thinking as a way to personal development - but practising at home in Ross on Wye and in Hereford at the Haven building and elsewhere.


Please get in touch if you'd like to know more.

Sally
Summer 2011 



Tuesday, 26 July 2011

Creative Words @ the Haven July - Thoughts on Four

As this was a short four week series we got to thinking about the symbolism of the number four.  Our running themes emerged from T.S. Eliot's Four Quartets (just little snatches so our brains didn't explode); Seamus Heaney's Seeing Things (particularly the section called Squarings); Jo Shapcotts poems about quadrupeds - we all particularly enjoyed Lies which tell the Truth about Sheep. It's a joy. We also got swept away by the idea of rivers and the idea of opposites.  The picture below is of a rather drunken river god.  Part 3 of Four Quartets begins:  I don't know much about gods; but I think that the river is a strong brown god.


I brought in a variety of objects including a bell and dorje which symbolise (among other things) the male/female aspects of being. Rather nice to think that the voice of the feminine bell is the voice of Buddhah.
A couple of responses are shown below.


The Dorje and Bell

Pauline Apperley

Man makes his presence felt
The dorje shows he is the master
Muffled sound comes from her
He rants and she listens

He bursts into the room
She hovers in the doorway
Her bell-like voice is to be heard
He clangs above her.
  

His and Hers
Annie Booth

bell and dorje
cup and sword
yin and yang

feminine and male
key and yale
soft and hard

give and take
make or break
early or late

all one another
sister and brother
father and mother.


This is the beginning of Lies  by Jo Shapcott

 In reality, sheep are brave, enlightened
 and sassy. They are walking clouds
 and like clouds have forgotten
 how to jump. As lambs they knew.











So we can contemplate the idea that we knew a lot more useful stuff when we were young.
To end a quotation from the end of Four Quartets which has a satisfyingly oriental circularity.
We shall not cease from exploration

And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.




Saturday, 23 July 2011

A change of direction


As some of you already know I have decided to make some changes in the way I work. I have loved these last few years working with groups and meeting so many wonderful people but I now feel the need to regenerate. 
So from September 2011 I will be working with individuals - still offering creative writing and creative thinking as a way to personal development - but practising at home in Ross on Wye and in Hereford at the Haven building. I am offering the usual therapeutic hour and will tailor the sessions to the client's agenda.

I will also be offering appointments via phone and email if distance or travel is a problem. 


Monday, 20 June 2011

Side Lines, Colour and Winston Roeth - Last session 9th June

 
For our last session of this colourful series we focused on pink and got in touch with our frivolous side. As a special treat we also had CAKE and my idea of  heaven is probably a place where you get both poetry and cake eternally.  
The poems we read were Bullfinches by Patricia Pogson and Flamingo Watching by Kay Ryan. 
The writers also did a Show and Tell of pink objects brought from home which featured a giant bunny, a tiny faded lamb, and a beetroot cake supplied by the wonderfully creative Yvette who also made the quilt on display here for her little granddaughter.  It was a bright and exciting morning. 

I'd like to finish with a quotation from a blessing on the colour theme - it mentions a flock of colours and is very popular. For more by John O'Donohue see his website: http://www.johnodonohue.com 

from Beannacht
Celtic Blessing
by  John O'Donohue

And when your eyes
freeze behind
the grey window
and the ghost of loss
gets in to you,
may a flock of colours,
indigo, red, green,
and azure blue
come to awaken in you
a meadow of delight.
  

Sunday, 12 June 2011

Creative Words @ the Haven, Six Poets and A Green Thought




We focused on two poems by the wonderful Brian Patten this week - A Blade of Grass and Garden Lore.
His website gives samples of his poems and is well worth exploring:  www.brianpatten.co.uk
The theme of jewels cropped up again in Garden Lore which mentions the birthstone for each month of the year.  Maybe I should get some ...

Here is the opening stanza of the first poem -

A BLADE OF GRASS
Brian Patten   b. 1946

You ask for a poem.
I offer you a blade of grass.
You say it is not good enough.
You ask for a poem.


Here are some of the responses:  

Inspired by “A blade of Grass” by Brian Patten

 Green Poem
Dorothy Greenhalgh

They say that this is a poem that’s green
But I have seen them when
They are pale and dying
They are not at their best
But then, when green,
They are trying to live -
And I feel that they are trying
To stay with the rest.












A Gift of Nature - A Smile

Helen Crook

Alchemy of passion, genetics and love,
A connection made and united in a moment.
The lips that kissed then, murmur quietly now
Given without consequence; it is transferred.
Encouraging the expression not altered by time,
The infant smile, pure and unprejudiced. 













The Lawn’s Lament

Sue Davies


Oh no, here he comes again,
Why me?
Wouldn’t you have thought
He could find somewhere else to wee.
I am becoming shrivelled and brown
and there is nothing I can do.
My brothers and sisters around me
all feel the same way too.


Oh Ted, I know that
is your name;
for she calls you and asks if
you want to play a game.
Please leave me alone
and let me be,
Why, oh why, don’t you go
and find a tree.




Inspired by “Garden Lore” - Brian Patten
It starts:
Who will take care of this garden, who will nurture it?

'I will,' said January.
'I will anchor it to the earth with snowdrops.
I will give it my stone, the garnet.'






Twelve
Hilary Robinson
For Twinks who likes rhyme and rhythm

January
Game foxhounds sing in the short afternoons
Ice on black puddles crack loud with horse hooves.
Cold owls shriek too-whit too-whit too-whoo
Frogs sleep tightly under the frozen pool.

February
Green leaves uncurl in the dark roots of trees,
Snowdrops and primroses feel at their ease
Shrug their shoulders and begin to awake.
Ducks fly plaintively over murky lakes.

March
Rabbits and squirrels rush fast out in the sun
Hares spring up boldly and look for sex fun,
Boxing games, fists up, romps on the good earth -
Who’ll give up, belly flop and run off first?

April
Badgers climb out of their yuck winter's lair
Cuckoos torment and hide in thin air.
Scuttling hedgehogs dive wild across roads,
Fools beckon in shadows to crying toads.

May
Wifely, “Cast not a clout till May is out.”
Thrushes, sparrows, chaffinches, blackbirds shout,
“Our nests are built and our eggs are all laid.”
 But the cuckoo has come and made his raid.

June
Columbines dance to a slow fairy tune,
Roses smell so sweet in their fullest bloom
Longest day elderflowers shake in fear
Is it down, down, down the rest of the year?

July
Buzzards mew piercing the deep, deep blue sky
Ripe berries make chutney, jelly and pie,
Apples stored lovingly, hay in the lofts
Golden Rod, Poppies red, silky and soft.

August
Midges bite hard and horse flies are crazy,
Sun burns the skin and we all feel lazy.
Corn fields grow quickly and ripen daily
Wheat turns golden and then whitens palely

September
The big red moon wanes and harvests are done
Days grow shorter and weaker grows the sun.
Twittering swallows come and fly away
Swifts disappear, gone in a day.

October
The hunter moon looms and the winds grow chill
Grey shadows spread over the purple hill.
Cubbing begins and the horses grow fit
Wood is collected and fires are lit.

November
Fireworks bang, crash and light up the sky
Catherine wheels spinning and rockets fly high.
Frost etches glass panes and whitens brown grass,
Wild geese scream and excitedly pass.

December
Wrens and robins look wistful but still sing,
Carols are chanted and church bells we ring.
Christmas stars gleam in the wintry night
Mistletoe, holly, ivy, love and light.


















Garden Magic
Hazel Pope

An hour a day at least
To keep the weeds at bay
And increase the production line by sowing seeds
Against the day when frost and rain
Change ephemeral summer veg
To sprouts and sprouting broccoli and kale.

So this is supposed to be a daily drudge.
Which I enjoy.  It's thinking time,
Observing time. I tidy edges with a spade,
Turn up a gem.  A shard of something made
So many years ago.  A blue chinese person with a fan.
Behind, a  bridge. A token tree- the pottery curves
A broad segment.  I try to imagine
A jug, a bowl, quite large.
This shard, a gem.







                  

Wednesday, 8 June 2011

Creative Words @ the Haven, Six Poets and The World's Wife



Inspired by Carol Ann Duffy’s collection - “The World’s Wife”

Eve
Helen Crook


Centuries of blame have vilified me as a temptress,   
Blamed for a moment of innocence and inexperience, then banished forever
Created from the rib near his beating heart; loved, yet not equal.
Destined to be submissive and subservient, dominated by man.

Yet they forget I am the mother of mankind, responsible for the spawning
Of the masses, the matriarch of the human race, genetically immortal.
Yet the best piece of advice I can offer from  the knowledge I have gained is:
Stay away from apples, they’re nothing but trouble!






Monday, 30 May 2011

Healing Words for Midsummer

I am planning a one-day workshop in therapeutic creative writing for anyone with an interest in the subject.  It will be experiential, enjoyable! and worth 4 hours CPD.
Please get in touch if you'd like to know more.  SG




Tuesday, 24 May 2011

Creative Words @ the Haven, Six Poets and Vintage Jewellery


For this ongoing series of workshops I decided to focus on one contemporary poet each week. So far we have looked at Colette Bryce and George Szirtes.   The work shown here was inspired by 3 poems by Colette Bryce - Wish You Were, +, and The Wearer.   The final poem was the result of the poet's work with the V&A and was based on a particular necklace from the collection.  See http://www.vam.ac.uk/
Fired up by all this people wrote about jewellery for "homework" based on a series of V&A postcards of vintage pieces.
Necklace

Pauline Apperley

Necklace like macaroni
Hair auburn red and wet
From the shower straight out of bed
Chunky, not sapphire or pearls
Ornament for young girls
Fashions change, we must follow them
To look attractive, keep our men
There is something to be said for looking good !
It does look good, I knew it would.

I had a garnet, ruby red
I lost it, that’s where it led
I look at the necklace, the one like macaroni
And wonder what its fate will be
The wearer likes green hearts and orangey beads
But the heart has a crack in it
As if the heart bleeds
A path lies ahead, entwined in this artistry.



The Brooch
Helen Crook

Dark green leaves given form and life, then enamelled
Varnishing them into timeless  suspension.
Pale luminescent cream buds hang bowed solemnly
Timed at ten past two. Closing my eyes you are here.

Your coat matched your lipstick,’ Moulin Rouge’.
The brooch resplendent against the blood red
large lapel of your capacious coat. My head held firm
embraced to your left breast, my ear imprinted with
Lily of the Valley, long after you left.




One more came in later from Annie who had a car accident after the workshop and had taken home a picture of a jewel from the V and A collection.  We all wish her well.


Jewel

Annie Booth
  
Women reach down through the ages
The really, truly sages
A peach of a protective pendant
Perhaps slumbering dormant
Come to me through five hundred years
And bringing with it what tears?

Chosen by me from many
Offering sisterly company
To see me through near-death
You do not slumbereth

From the other side of your work
You do not shirk
All the pain of your life
All the sadness and strife

I feel it as you reach out
This time - no shout
Just  - Why, why again?
Then peace I did attain

Thank you for my life
I am truly a wife
Come nearer, nearer, nearer
My sixteenth century wearer

Your jewel is called protective
Is that personal or collective?
Beauty on many levels
Shining through all the bevels

Angels must be time travellers




And another piece - a sort of prose poem by Sue based on a heart and key.















REGARD
Sue Davies

My eye is caught by the sudden glint of gold and flash of semi-precious gemstones winking up at me from the dark depths of my jewellery box.

How long have you languished there, hunkered down in that corner among soft red velvet? How long has it been since I last wore you around my neck, felt the warmth of you resting on my breasts?

I cannot bear to wear you, nor part with you; for I still like to fool myself into thinking that you were once given to me with love.

He said he loved me and proudly told me that your gemstones were so arranged in order to spell out the word ‘regard’.
Ruby, Emerald, Garnet, Amethyst, Ruby and Diamond.

I felt a twinge of nervousness when he placed you around my neck and kissed me, professing to love me forever. Regard seemed such a casual term, not that I wanted to seem ungrateful, but in all honesty alarm bells did sound.

I hold you in my hands and my warmth spreads into you making you feel alive.
I remember now why it is so long since I last looked at you, because the pain of longing for lost love pierces my chest, almost bringing me to my knees.

Enough, enough, I am still not ready to deal with this.
Back into the soft velvet you go, rest there until I can look upon you more objectively.  How long that may take in all honesty I cannot say, but who knows, one day I may be able to regard you in a better light.



Coming up - Carol Ann Duffy, Kathleen Jamie, Brian Patten and Maura Dooley.