My poem “Indwelling,” Animated
June 25, 2010
A few years ago, my friend the designer Jan Almquist, who was teaching a course at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, asked if one of his students could use a poem of mine for a video project.
Jeremy Collinson chose “Indwelling,” a poem that is part of my ecopoem sequence called “Dwelling.” The poem originally appeared in the University of Pennsylvania’s literary journal, CrossConnect. Here is the animated video, a filmpoem, if you will of my poem “Indwelling”:
A number of the poems from my Dwelling sequence have been published. You can find a sampling here.
And here is the text of the poem:
Indwelling
Shooting stars cross a city night sky. In the moment
before they fall, think about dwellings,
houses made of brick, stone, and wood—dwelling and indwelling—
miracle keeping matter together, from imploding or inverting.
How dwellings become a city, interdependent.
How stars become a night sky, suspended.
(Late fall, nearly winter, fog-caul warms night air through inversion.
The meteor version of life heads straight to the matter of our bed.)
What holds up the sky holds each one of us, too—
as we move against one another in this taut, elastic field,
warming with each movement, causing little inversions
all around us, and shooting stars—
there goes another.
–Scott Edward Anderson
June 25, 2010 at 9:24 pm
[…] This post was mentioned on Twitter by ScottEdward Anderson, Jasmine Williams. Jasmine Williams said: Love it. Animated Poetry! RT @greenskeptic: An animated version of my poem "Indwelling," made by Jeremy Collinson: http://bit.ly/c6XnLg […]
June 25, 2010 at 9:59 pm
Scott,
I really enjoyed this, not just the poem but the way Jeremy played with it. The soundtrack worked well too.
nice collaboration.
jt
June 26, 2010 at 12:26 am
Thanks John. It was a very interesting way to see my poem anew.