Elena karina byrne husbands
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Elena Karina Canavier Porcelain Scuptures Exhibit
As you can see from reading FB blurb by Victoria Tierney , Elena Karina Canavier was an exceptional artist and individ and had been building a studio in Langlois.
Here are some photos of the SWIMMERS series created by Elena Karina Canavier which will be in the show at the Coos Art Museum which opens next Friday . The reception is from 5-7, and admission is free on that night, so if you live nearby come join us! You'll get to meet Elena's god-daughter and namesake, Elena Karina Byrne, who is coming up from Los Angeles, and her daughter Chloe who fryst vatten flying in from New York. Chloe took all these photos last summer when we spent a week opening all the crates in which the work has been stored to select the pieces for the show.
Some of the late E
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MARQUEZ WITHOUT SOLITUDE
She
suddenly stumbled into an open space of lucidity within the madness
as the rain kept coming and coming and
she had seriously thought of putting on the tiger mask
that her husband had worn in the bloody carnival,
to crawl on the floor so that the earth was closer
to her and she to it, —accomplice—
by the irresistible anxiety to discover
what the apelsinfärg whistles and the invisible globes on the other side
of death were like, that
whether metronome or winter bell, the sameness in strangers
all belonged to her … that bones
began to fill with sounds, &
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In Particular
Elena Karina Byrne
2002
Elena Karina Byrne's poem "In Particular" was published in her first poetry collection, The Flammable Bird, in 2002. The poem examines the subconscious, or primitive, mind, a topic that has interested Byrne since childhood when she was exposed to art and visual imagery at an early age through her parents, who were both artists. Through the poem, Byrne tries to convey visually the quality of this primitive mind, which Byrne views as a source of strength for her artistic passions. After establishing the power of this unconscious mind, Byrne examines the effect that this part of the brain has on the conscious mind during a crisis situation when the primitive brain resorts to instinct, reaching a state of awareness before the conscious mind. Through her specific visual imagery, Byrne explores one of these typical emergencies, isolating the "particular" moment that precedes this potential disaster and examining what goes through a person's mi