Tonight is the opening of the 4th semi-annual Word-Art show at the Gallery on the Green in Canton, CT. Once again, I had the honor of working with my dear friend, Karen Jasper, who wrote the poem "Wounded Bird" in response to my painting, "On Ancient Wings." The show runs through April 12, with an evening of readings on Saturday, April 4 at 7:30.
Wounded Bird
Part 1
A swallow can fly miles, from treetop to ocean cliff,
The wind's undertow buoyantly gliding her
To a resting place warm with possibility.
She is free, lifted higher by duty and family,
Not a thought outside of weather and wind,
Acceptance and choice safely within her span.
But then, jolted in flight,
her heart pumped deep
And she is transformed,
The unknown and unfamiliar
In that very moment,
A broken wing reclaiming
Something lost and ancient
Spiraling deep and desperate
Into the habitat of hidden.
Some species heal their wings
In solitude, licking and lying
In a nest of thin twigs
Healing from within
Until they can fly again,
To and from home.
But other species do not heal
And they tuck that wing
Underneath themselves,
Landlocked and less,
The natural order
Injured inside and out.
That species will push on
Practicing, praying, pretending
That wings are but a crutch;
Meanwhile hoping that reverse gravity
May rocket them up and open them wide,
Heedfully whole to fly again.
Part 2 (My Side)
I fly from necessity
Hovering over leafy trees and endless water,
Following an inestimable path from home
Only to return again,
Where I’ll find my roots and rhythm
Deeply tucked in grainy sand.
I do not question why I do this--
This destiny of family and fate--
What I cannot fathom I will not change.
My twelve feather tail and meager wing span
Weigh in below two ounces,
Not enough for my survival
And yet I maneuver and endure,
I doggedly sing my song
And tuck my broken wing
Under my expanding and rapid chest
Until I know if
I might fly again.
If I should die here
Unable to lift myself beyond this place
I will fly anyway
Straight to this indomitable future
Where I will be an African River Martin
tending and fending
Reaching still and always,
Weightless in my belief
That I was born for just this moment.
- Karen Jasper










She's sporting one crazy, nature tattoo there. :)
Posted by: Mick Mather | March 15, 2009 at 08:20 AM
Yes, she's most defintely a nature girl:)
Posted by: carla | March 15, 2009 at 10:23 AM
Gorgeous poem and painting! I love the hair in the painting. especially! The poem perfectly weaves its beauty.
Best of luck with the showing! :)
Posted by: Genie Sea | March 15, 2009 at 10:27 AM
This is so beautiful, both the poem and the painting! It lifted my spirits considerably! (Which is a great achievement on a grey and boring Monday ;))
Good luck with the showing!
Love,
Carra
Posted by: carra | March 16, 2009 at 07:17 AM
Oh how beautiful the poem and the painting... I love the magical feeling of birds, especially white birds... Roxanne
Posted by: rivergardenstudio | March 18, 2009 at 01:36 PM
Oh these words with your images...perfection of the utmost. Love especially the last line of the poem on your side.
Congrats lovey! I am SO over the top happy for you.
xxoo,
a.
Posted by: Andie | March 18, 2009 at 01:37 PM
Hi Karla...
So glad I found your blog again, and get to see your incredible, fascinating art! I do love this painting...wow! you are truly gifted..thank you for sharing your gifts with the world...
cheers!
Posted by: Cheryl | April 16, 2009 at 11:08 PM
Carla this has to be one of my all time favorite paintings. I feel like I could reach right out and touch it!
Posted by: Ginger *:) | April 18, 2009 at 05:44 PM