A
painting by Guy Anderson that was installed as a huge floor mural at Seattle's Fourth Avenue SeaFirst Building.  It has since been carpeted over, and for all practical and artistic purposes no longer exists.

Kingfisher
 a Journal of Northwest Art and Literature

Dedicated to the appreciation of poetry, fiction, painting,
 literary criticism, drawing, sculpture, music, movies, video,
 but not exclusively that produced in the Pacific Northwest

Winter 2002

Volume One, Number One,

 
Copyright 2002 Kingfisher Press

All pictures below courtesy of Mary Randlett


The poet in June 1965

"Stone's Capacity:"
The Legacy of Robert Sund

A critical reading 

               1
Robert Sund died on September 29 in Anacortes after a long illness.  Diabetes and cancer ate away his life forces, and he died a slow, unpleasant death.  Gone now a while, his poetry and paintings linger in my mind with a fierce determination.   Both are better than only a handful of close friends know.  I am not among them, but I knew him for fifty years and always enjoyed his poetry.  I came across his paintings only recently and am impressed.    I committed the common fault of paying him scant attention and thinking of him as a "character" (which indeed he was), but not taking him seriously.  Well, that was a mistake.  The time has come to give the "character" his recognition and to set the record straight.  His achievements are rather remarkable.  He is a poet that bears a close look, a painter very much in the wide, open-ended Pacific Northwest Tradition, which happens to have a lot of the Orient in it.  It is no coincidence that he lived much of his life in and around LaConner and Anacortes.  They are towns that nurture the arts and artists.  The sea is near and so are the hemlocks and cedars vital to many for meditation.

He and I came out of a fabulous past, most of us lit students at the University of Washington in the late 40s and early 50s.  The Ave was a large part of our lives and continued its strong influence even after, one by one, most of us moved away. Poets were Jim Wright, Richard Hugo, David Wagoner, Mel LaFollette, Richard Selig, and Carolyn Kiser.  Painters Mark Tobey, Morris Graves, Richard Gilkey, Ward Corley, and Jim Martin wove in and out of everybody's street life.  I saw them about as often as I see herons today.  For I live in Ish country.  Sund gave it its rightful name.

The war in Korea ground on and many of us, when our number was called, went off to military service.  Life on The Ave went on, anyhow. (It is an Anyhow Place.)  The Blue Moon Tavern was the common watering hole; nightly we bent to the trough.  The evening Dylan Thomas read at Guggenheim Hall, and the party afterwards, was our brief epicenter.  We celebrated for days afterwards in the appropriate manner.  Bob, or Sund, as we called him then, was part of our large, amorphous group.  This happened nearly fifty years ago.  Many are not around to remember it.

His poems are usually simple and direct, and bring an immediate Zen-like pleasure upon even a casual reading. Enlightenment may not be the wrong word for it.  His simplicity is often deceptive,  however.  It takes a lifetime of hard work to achieve such a goal.  He has acknowledged Ted Roethke, a former teacher of ours, as his mentor.  Not so obvious influences are William Carlos Williams and Ezra Pound.  And of course Walt Whitman.

                   2
Let Sund speak for himself.  He always has.  His voice is sonorous and direct.  Besides, it is nearly impossible to paraphrase a Sund poem.

The following quote is from his third and last book, "A Note on Publishing Shack Medicine," and comprises a short, untitled poem in itself.  It is similar to the way he communicated with his friends, but is obviously more complex and carefully thought out:


And all the while the dreamer of
       festivities
Is waiting just by the door,
Juggling small blue trumpets
       and paper oranges.
The poet says:
"Might well have inclined to Formalism,
Had not the surprises kept coming."
     And the juggler replies:
"Me, too.
I began to hear
The small struck bells of
     enticing particularity!"  


(Continued on page 2.)         

 


Only three years later

It Seems to Me ...

A new art gallery opening up is  good news, even in LaConner  (an artsy-craftsy seaside town, lacking a beach).  But when we stop to think about it, there aren't so many galleries at all.   Photomontage folded after a run of about a year in its new fancy quarters, and this leaves, ugh, the Thomas Kinkade sales outlet, upscale Serendipity, and of course the Great Cultural Center Itself, the Museum of Northwest Art, where the good stuff is not for sale.
     The opening of
The Vixen seems at first an unmixed blessing.  It turns out to be Joel Brock's old studio across from Maple Hall, at the far end of town.  Sure enough, two of Brock's fine paintings are for sale ($750, $850) there.  Now Brock isn't always great (see, for instance, his numerous oils in the new Stanwood/Camano Medical Center), but most often his stuff is very good and reasonably priced.  And these two pieces are.
     Other work is somewhat uneven.  Douglas Bajurin's small Orca sculptures are priced at $420.  Quinn K. Thompson, who bills himself as a Gonzo Starving Artist, has bright, bold oils for $75 and $150.  His plan, evidently, is to work fast and sell cheap, and make a living at it.  I wish him well.  Artists represented at the opening include Jacqueline De Gavia (watercolors nicely matted and framed for around $225), Michelle Fehner, Amy Griffin, Skye Harju, Ed Kamuda, Anne Martin McCool, Laura Murdoch, Diane Perlow, and Anne Volmering.  Some of these artists are from neighboring Anacortes.
     A word to the owner/attendant:  come out of your glass-enclosed office when you have a visitor.  You may be missing a potential sale, at most, and at the least you are being inhospitable.  And both you can't afford to be.


At MONA, in a show soon to close, are wonderful cast bronze sculptures by Ann Morris, huge and gnarled, often antlered, vaguely human figures, which she says "emphasize the masculine and feminine principles of consciousness within the human psyche and asserts that a holistic relationship between them and with nature is essential to human health and development."  They speak much more directly than this, however.  They are primal and immediate.  More of her sculptures may be viewed in her sculpture garden, "Sculpture Woods," on Lummi Island.  I assume they are viewable by appointment for potential sales.
     Not so wonderful are paintings by Mary Henry, who studied with Laszlo Moholy-Nagy at the new Bauhaus School and at the Institute of Design in Chicago.  Her paintings are large, geometrical abstractions, bright and bold, and unfortunately they don't communicate.  I search their surfaces for meaning, however elusive, but don't find much or any.  Perhaps the fault is mine.  I look forward to MONA's next show, Iridescent Light: --
The Emergence of Northwest Art, which includes 21 painters, photographers, and sculptors of the so-called Northwest School, along with a book to match, text by Delores Tarzan Ament and photographs by Mary Randlett.  (Kingfisher plans to review show and book comprehensively in its next issue.)


Recently Read and Recommended  

Heather McHugh, Hinge & Sign, Poems 1968-1993, Wesleyan University Press, 1994.

McHugh is an excellent poet, working in the Irish tradition of Joyce and Beckett, with a keen ear and a taste for puns.  She also teaches writing at the University of Washington's English Department.  I like her work a lot.  Let me quote from "Not A Sin"--about the sexiest poem I've ever read. 
(Note, John Donne:  It takes a woman to be truly sexy in verse, and in much else.)   It is too long to quote in its entirety, so I include only its beginning and end, with apologies.  But go find the book and read what lies in between:

"It's not a virtue either, really, this
rubbing and rubbing against someone,
        yourself
a someone too, until
someone must burst or yell.

                       *   *  *
. . . As bushes burst,
as flames float off in heart-boats, in the  flood,
I open up
my mouth and find
you've filled it full
of flesh.  I mean

you made me  feel
the way I feel
so words would not
be proud.  I know.
You made men so I'd kneel."

The other poems are equally fine, each in a different way.  Heartily recommended.

Anthony Powell, A Dance To The Music of Time. Four volumes, twelve novels, various publishing dates.

The English Proust, he has been carelessly called, Powell has written a monumental work about the long, interwoven lives of four boys from Eton--Nick Jenkins, the narrator; Peter Templer and Charles Stringham, friends and peers; and the nefarious Kenneth Widmerpool, loathed and despised, who nonetheless prospers, rises mysteriously through the officer ranks during World War II, becomes a knight of the Empire, marries a woman (Pamela  Flitton) who sleeps with a huge cast of characters, but not her husband, and in the end joins a occult hippie colony and dies in a novel and highly surreal manner.

   (Continued on page 2.)

Here

Hit Counter


In 1992 with autoharp

A Tribute to Robert Sund

Recollections Compiled by Arthur Greeno

Preface:
Singer in the Shadows

Singer in the shadows, wake up: 
A song is required that never has been before.
     Come prepared!

A cleansing wind will announce
     you,
Afterwards, the sea will fall silent
and you will sing and then be lost again
     as the sea commences,
A small stone set before the door of eternity
   will recall
the day you were honored.
 

Born on November 29, 1929 in Olympia, Washington, to Swede-Finn parents, Robert Sund was adopted as a young child by Evart and Elsa Sund of Elma, Chehalis Valley, Washington.  He grew up at the family farm on “Swede Hill,” with his parents, grandparents, and brother.

He graduated from Elma High School in 1948 and went on to Pre-Med Studies at the University of Washington.  There he met his future teacher and mentor, the poet Theodore Roethke, who took him away from the study of medicine and set him on  his life’s path.  He recalled Roethke asking early in their relationship, “You have a musical voice; do you know languages?”  And, of course, he did, treasuring fluency in Swedish all of his life.  To pay for tuition, he worked summers in the woods at one of the last railroad logging camps in the Northwest.

He finished his B.A. in Creative Writing in 1954.  In the late 1950s, he worked in the Alaskan fishing industry, mostly as a boat’s cook.  During this time, he filled notebook after notebook with poems and observations of the vast natural beauty around him.  Of that unpublished work he has said, “There may not be much there . . . a lot of people have done better.”  He returned to graduate study at the University in Comparative Literature (English and Scandinavian) from 1957-1963.

He was briefly married to a fellow student of Roethke’s in the early sixties, Maire Magee, whom he nicknamed Ireland.  “She was beautiful,” he said, “but it was mistaken.”
   
(Continued on page 2.)

 

 


"For Bob Arnold
Frogs herons swallows & beavers
     some flowers and river silt—

Robert Sund"

   He wrote this on the flyleaf of Shack Medicine and mailed it to me in 1994, following a chance encounter at the Stillaguamish Festival of The River, where he and some friends were reading their poetry to an inattentive audience of denim-dressed country people, most of them towing or being towed by children, on a sweltering Saturday in August.  In return I sent him a copy of my  1993 flyfishing book.
     We saw each other only a couple of times after that and never long enough to have a good chat, which we both wanted, since we were school chums and had lost touch.  Never close, we nonetheless had a lot of friends in common.  Now we needed to exchange gossip, which is one of the ties that bind.
     It never happened, and we remained unbound.  I tried to get a note to him, when I got word how ill he was, but I was too late.  He lay comatose.  Dead now several months, he seems more alive to me than back in the mid-90s, when he was only moderately sick, in and out of hospitals, some of them charity wards.  Friends held a poetry reading and benefit to help pay his bills.  (Everyone should have friends like that.  And never need them to do this.)

 

We dedicate the first issue of Kingfisher, a Journal of Northwest Art and Literature, to Robert Sund, poet and artist, who died this fall.  A shy and retiring man who lived for more than eleven years in a shack at the mouth of the Skagit River, his influence was primarily local, yetlike a pebble dropped into a streamis extending ever wider with the passage of time.  

DCP_0790Sund2,rotate,sharpen15crop,spotcropagainsahrpen15RED1.7X2.4.JPG (77028 bytes)                      DCP_0789SundPainting1,sharpen12crop,clonecropagainshatpen10againRED2X2.4.JPG (98758 bytes)

Two paintings by Robert Sund in the collection of the Museum of Northwest Art; they hang adjacent to a White Writing-style painting by Mark Tobyand hold their own quite nicely.


Click to Visit our Art Galleries 

E-mail us and tell us what you think of Kingfisher Journal at: rcarnold@greatnorthern.net