CONTRIBUTORS
Adam Donaldson Powell
Adelle Desiree Jean
Alan M. Danzis
Amy Marie Hess
Andy Harding
Angela Neff
Airton Adami ( Pitti )
Åse Lilleskare Faugstad
Ayesha Alam
Azra Daniel Francis
Barbara Elizabeth Mercer
Barbara Smilgin
Barbie Frudakis
Charles Griffith
Charles Ray
Christian Avery Bryant
Christopher English
Corrie Ancone
Crystal Diane Arbogast
Cynthia Physentzou
Dana Kent Gallup
Danny Cottam
Daryl Hawkins
David T. Culver
Deborah Clearwaters
Del Senkbeil
Dennis Newell
Diane Oatley
Dimitris P. Kraniotis
Donald Edward Kidd
Duane Locke
Dwayne Pagnotto
Eden Bryant
Edward Hanson
El-Hadi Kadouf
Ellaraine Lockie
Floriana Hall
Francie Aguilera
Frieda Groffy
Genio
Gregory A. De Feo
Heather S. McMullen
Hirsch L. Silverman
James Ray Scott
Janet K. Brennan
Jeroen van Valkenburg
Jerry Bradley
Julian Garcia
Karen A Sperry
Karunesh Agrawal
Kelley Jean White
Konstantina Daskalaki
Ladymaggic
Laura Stamps
Linda L. Bielowski
Lisa Zaran
Louie Levy
Lynda M Ortiz
Lynn Veach Sadler
Maria Cristina Azcona
Mark Odom
Matthew J. George
Michael Estabrook
Mildred Savage
Minerva Bloom
Monica E. Smith
Nancy Arnold
Nicole Jahan
Oliver Cook
Pat Goltz
Patricia Jo Roche
Patricia Wellingham-Jones
Patrice Lauren
Ray Wilkins
Rhonda Marie Hayman
Richard MacAleese
Robert C. Carucci
Robin M. Buehler
Rod Shortsleeve
Rose Marie Streeter
Ruth Anne Boothe
Sandy Jean-Baptiste Joseph
Santosh Kumar
Shelagh McKenna
Shirley Bolstok
Sohan Qadri
Stephanie Jarema
Susan Strom
T. D. Ruley
Tatiana Pahlen
Teri Schwartz
Terry Nippard
Therese (FREEBURD)
Tonya Martell
Vera Costa
Victoria Ellison
W. S. Mayo
Yvonne Appleyard
Yvonne Sparkes
Zabrina Carpio-Egan
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PICASSO
your brain's
axe only chops hugest inherent
Trees of Ego, from
whose living and biggest
bodies lopped
of every
prettiness
you hew form truly
- e. e. cummings (1894-1962)
Chief
Editor:
Dr.
Santosh Kumar ISBN:
81-8253-050-4 $35 (pp: 176)
Binding: Paperback & Hardback
Publisher: Cyberwit.net
Pub. Date: 2005
Availability: In Stock (Ships within 1 to 2 days)
Condition: New
Front & Back Cover Paper: 300 GSM (JK Cote
Premium Art Paper)
Inside Pages: 130 GSM (JK Cote Premium Art
Gloss Paper)
 |
Description:
The
mission of Cyberwit is to encourage and promote
the visual arts and poetry. I hope our planet
'where ignorant armies clash by night' will
become a safer and better place to breathe in
through the medium of photos, paintings, drawings,
and poetry. The great significance of painting was
very well realised by Lewis Carroll in his Alice's
Adventures in Wondrland, Ezra Pound in his Chinese
Ideograms, and Augusto de Campos who pioneered
Concrete Poetry. Cyberwit's Harvests
of New Millennium
is divided into three sections: (1) Photos,
Paintings and Drawings, (2) Poetry and (3) Biography
of Contributing Artists. The book features poems
and artworks by the artists from all over the
world.
I
have tried my best to include only such
artists, who are able to transcend the dream world
of 'fancy and funs, the daffodil and lily."
The world today needs art, which is modern,
cosmical, and has the postmodern quest for
"metanarratives" (Lyotard). The "Rebel Poets
of the 1950s" in USA attacked "the hackneyed
and moribund" culture. For example, the Beat
poets like Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, William
S. Burroughs, and Gregory Corso were quite
unconventional in their experiments with poetic
technique. Ginsberg's "Howl" (1955) became
the best-seller after its obscenity trial in 1957.
The
poems and artwork selected for Harvests
of New Millennium
will
surely compel our admiration. Several poets in Harvests
of New Millennium
have concentrated on the burning problems of
our megapolitan world. It is true that the
postmodern era is highly confused about the
direction to be adopted by a poet. The quest for
"infallible church of poetic tradition" seems
to be a futile attempt. To attain lofty, sublime
and severe style the contemporary poet "should
ascend out of
common interest, the thoughts of the
newspapers, of the market place, of men of
science, but only so far as we can carry the
normal, passionate, reasoning self, the
personality as a whole" (W. B. Yeats).
The
fact is that a poet should have a message to
convey. A poem must not be empty; it must have
content. "Dante, Milton, Goethe, would never,
for a moment, have admitted that they were but the
idle singers of empty days; every one of them felt
he had a message, and must be free to utter it or
die. Imagine, in these poets, the same amount of
purely poetic power, vast as that is, without the
thought and how immense the loss!" (Kellett, Fashion
in Literature). But the philosophy or thought
of a poet should not be a hindrance in our poetic
enjoyment. The whole mission of a poet is to make
his thought and philosophy come to life in other
minds than his. "The radiant persuasions of
sense and sound in a poet's phrases marshalled
by the structure of his thought into the inclusive
harmony, will effect an experience in the
reader's mind which may be, so far as it is
possible, the imitation of the poet's
experience" (Abercrombie, The Theory of
Poetry).
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Hardback
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Reviews
Sample
Artworks
 ©
Adelle Desiree Jean ©
Airton Adami ( Pitti )
© Angela Neff
 ©
Donald Edward Kidd
© Francie Aguilera
© Jeroen van Valkenburg

© Nancy Arnold
© Shelagh McKenna
 ©
Mildred Savage
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