
Having received such a seemingly enthusiastic response to my last post on the pollock, I decided to follow it up with yet another poetic form inspired by an abstract expressionist visual artist – the rothko. Created by poet Bob Holman who named the form after the painter Mark Rothko, it is a three-line poem with each line consisting of three words. Emulating Rothko (who was notorious for his bold use of color), the poem must contain the names of three different hues. These colors have to appear in the poem in either a horizontal, vertical or diagonal line (much like in tic-tac-toe). Another one of Holman’s rules for writing a rothko is that it can only be written while standing in front of an actual Rothko painting. Because of the difficulty for most poets to follow this, I think it is definitely permissible to ignore that particular rule. Instead, I found images of Rothko’s masterpieces online, and used them as my inspiration for the following examples:
Chasing Spring
Frisky black spaniels
Pursue grey squirrels
Through green grass
The Leaf Peepers
Everywhere they seek
Heralds of autumn –
Red, Orange, Yellow
Our Daily Quarrel
Verbal purple explosions
Puncturing white hush
Of amber afternoons
Tragedy on the First Day of School
Blue skies above,
Yellow bus runs
Red stop sign
Endless Mourning
Beige bones buried
Under umber earth –
Grief so black
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Published by Paul Szlosek
Paul Szlosek was born in Southbridge, Massachusetts, but currently resides in the nearby metropolis of Worcester. He was co-founder and host of the long-running Poet’s Parlor poetry reading in Southbridge and Sturbridge, as well as a past recipient of the Jacob Knight Award for Poetry. His poems have appeared in various local publications including the Worcester Review, Worcester Magazine, Sahara, Concrete Wolf, and Diner. He’s probably best known in the Worcester poetry community for his fanatical obsession with obscure poetry forms, and has invented his own including the ziggurat, the streetbeatina, and (most recently) the hodgenelle.
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Great poems!
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Thank you so much, Tanya!
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Very fascinating form, I’ll have to try that one. Love your examples
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Thank you so much, John! I really appreciate that. The original rothkos by Bob Holman were more abstract (like Rothko’s paintings), but I tried to make mine more narrative. I’m so pleased that you like them.
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Thank you for telling of this ‘new-to-me’ poetic style Paul, it is thrilling to make the connections between art and literature in this way. I loved your poems, and have had a go myself at writing in this poetic form. Loving it!
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You are very welcome, Carolyn! I am so pleased that you liked my attempts at the rothko, and you were inspired to write some of your own. I would love to see them!
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Thanks for sharing your new poetic form. I enjoyed all your examples. 🙂
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You are very welcome!, and thank you, I’m so pleased that you liked my rothkos!
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Reblogged this on davidbruceblog #2.
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Thank you so much for the reblog, David!
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Thanks again Paul for another new form! 😀 ❤
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You are very welcome,!
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Powerful, just like his paintings!
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Thank you so very much, Linda!😀
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I was intrigued enough by this to try the form, myself. Thank you for introducing the form to me.
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You are so very welcome! I am so glad you were inspired to write one.😀
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These are simple but effective. Will add them to my list to try, Paul.
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Thank you, that is great! It is a fun form to play with. My rothkos turned out to be more narrative than the original ones by Bob Holman, which had an abstract quality similar to the paintings that inspired them.
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You are welcome.
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