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a literary journal published by the Black Earth Institute dedicated to re-forging the links between art and spirit, earth and society

Lao Rubert and David Walder


Backyard

Lao Rubert

 

Here is where we live

in our own neighborhood, our own region

defined by oaks and maples,

camellias in December, azaleas in spring.

This is our place.

 

We don’t need celebrities

to describe our home,

our backyard.

We don’t need to be approved by Madison Ave.

or tailored by Nordstrom.

 

We can hear music on our own block,

pianos and saxophones,

drummers and rappers.

Our photographers

record the ground we walk.

This place is ours to document,

ours to taste

as we create

and recreate

this space.


Blue Note Dogs

David Walder

black and neon-colored photo of jazz musicians performing with a circular blur

 


Art can be a way of learning how another person sees the world and sharing that vision to create something new.

When we began this project, we hoped to create poems and images inspired  by—and connected to—each other’s work. David, a photographer, chose 25 pictures to share from his 91,000 digital images. Lao chose six poems. We exchanged pictures and poems, with no clear idea of what the end result might be.

We then began the process of creating something connected—in any way we chose—to what we had been given. Lao wrote poems inspired by David’s pictures and David took photographs inspired by the poems. David also chose images within his digital collection that connected to the poems.  We hoped our work would result in a new third piece of photos and poems that was different from where we  had started. We were excited to see what developed.

In the pieces “Backyard” and “Blue Note Dogs,” Lao’s poem was written as an appreciation of the artistic endeavors pursued in their neighborhood. David expanded the concept by including the thriving downtown music scene as part of his backyard and photographed the Duke St. Dogs, a local band playing their regular Friday dinner gig at the Blue Note Grill. The end result was a collaboration in which each piece enhanced the other and enriched our view of community.

This has been a fun process of discovery, learning and collaboration. We hope readers and viewers will bring their own insights to it and create collaborations of their own.

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Lao Rubert lives in Durham, North Carolina. Her poems have appeared—or will appear—in Atlanta Review, Barzakh, Collateral, Mantis, Mom Egg Review, Muleskinner, Poetry in Plain Sight, 2024 Pinesong Award Anthology, Poetry East, The Avenue, The Marbled Sigh, Wordpeace, Writers Resist and elsewhere. Rubert received an M.A. in English Literature from Duke University and has spent a career working to reform the criminal justice system.         

David Walder, a photographer based in Durham, North Carolina, has felt a lifelong inner drive to use photography as a means to explore, consider, and interact with the world around us. David’s portfolio is diverse, including documentary, experimental, and fine art photography. His work often challenges perspectives and incorporates techniques like intentional camera movement. 


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