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Kay Ryan

    Kay Ryan est reconnue comme l'une des voix les plus originales de la poésie contemporaine. Ses poèmes se caractérisent par leur forme très condensée, leur densité rythmique et leur esprit souvent caustique, attirant fréquemment des comparaisons avec Emily Dickinson et Marianne Moore. Ryan élabore ses vers économiques avec une facilité unique pour la rime « recombinante », s'établissant ainsi comme l'une des plus grandes poétesses américaines vivantes. Son œuvre est le fruit d'années de profonde contemplation, où les réflexions philosophiques s'entremêlent à un intellect froid qui lui permet d'aborder même des sujets « brûlants » avec un sentiment de distance.

    Nuova poesia americana
    Electricities
    Synthesizing Gravity
    • Synthesizing Gravity

      Selected Prose

      • 208pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      4,4(152)Évaluer

      This collection features essays by a renowned poet and Pulitzer Prize winner, offering insights into her unique perspective and literary journey. As a former Poet Laureate of the United States, Kay Ryan's work reflects her distinctive voice and thoughtful exploration of language and meaning. Readers can expect a blend of personal reflections and broader themes, showcasing her talent beyond poetry and inviting a deeper understanding of her artistic vision.

      Synthesizing Gravity
    • Electricities

      • 160pages
      • 6 heures de lecture

      Electricity in its myriad forms has intrigued people for centuries. In our modern era it powers nearly every machine and modern convenience that defines contemporary life. However, by hiding power lines underground or in the walls of our homes and through generations of miniaturization, our sense of what electricity is and how we have come to understand it is not widely considered. Electricities is comprised of photographs that depict constructions Goldes refers to as 'performing still-lifes' based on historical experiments into the nature of electricity. Electrical phenomena including electrostatics, high-voltage arcing, Faraday's first transformer, water conductivity, electrified graphite drawings, and other inventions and experiments form the basis of these works. Elegant and playful, Goldes uses commonplace materials such as string, pins, wire, pencil lines and bright colored backgrounds in his ingenious investigations. The photographs reveal how electricity behaves; how it jumps gaps, repels, attracts, arcs, destroys, and often confounds our expectations. Uniting the strategies of art and science his visually rigorous images reveal a mechanistic understanding of electricity in dialogue with the viewer's subjectivities that can expand, build upon and even contradict such explanations.

      Electricities