2021 National Poetry Month Ekphrastic Poetry Contest Winners, Part 4
The poems we are publishing this week were written in response to a painting by one of the most prominent contemporary Western artists, Mark Maggiori. The image was chosen by the Briscoe Western Art Museum. This concludes the 2021 National Poetry Month Ekphrastic Poetry series.
2021 EKPHRASTIC POETRY WINNERS – BRISCOE WESTERN ART MUSEUM
Artwork: Once Upon a Time, Mark Maggiori
Adult Winning Poems (in no particular order)
Two Horsemen of Mesilla
by Milton Jordan
I imagined Ed Dorn dismounting late
afternoon on the square in Mesilla
staring at the small adobe church
standing in the last of that day’s sunlight
expecting the parish priest to step out
the door just as the sun dropped below
ragged roof lines along the square’s west side
where merchants still stood in doorways hoping
for late arriving customers and I
rode past the church to tell the poet
Spielberg had offered three million for film
rights to Gunslinger and Ed Dorn sitting
on the square in Mesilla said to me,
‘Tell Spielberg he can stuff his three million.’
Exodusters
by Jeanie Sanders
Night after night the man dreamed
his sons were free!
Never would they be
maimed by
whips
or
chains.
But coated in self-determination
with gazes that stretched
to far horizons
like music on
the wind.
If You Are Headed West on Route 66
by Sarah Colby
Stop. Get out of your car.
Leave asphalt with its inferior mirage
for sun-smacked earth under high blue skies,
distant mountains of clouds massing
over ochre mesas, banded sandstone.
Listen for hoofbeats and the creak
of saddle leather. Breathe the tang of petrichor,
cattle-bruised sagebrush, and sweat.
Lose what you once were to the fabled West,
its unbounded amethyst horizons of promise
******
Youth Winning Poems (in no particular order)
Lone Rangers
by Marin Blankinship
Lone Rangers
Fighting For What’s Right
Riding
Working Hard
Everyday
Never Stopping
Steering Horses
Day And Night
Always
And
Forever
Cowboys
Rebirth: Sky, desert, plants, and us
By Pia Nathani
I look at the clouds
They’re speaking to me
the sky turns gray
I understand,
Rain! I say aloud with a smile
rebirth, happiness, calming.
My soul echo’s
My friend smiles and looks down at all the plants tenderly
He smiles and gets off his horse,
He lands smoothly on the prickly ground
And bends down
He slowly whispers to all the dying plants
“Don’t worry soon you will be reborn”
Congratulations to the winners, especially to Jeanie Sanders, fellow Sun Poet!
I have so enjoyed all the ekphrastic poems and this set is magnificent–
gorgeous, strong language and imagery
I have enjoyed the Ekphrastic poems so much. Great poem Sarah Colby!