Rainer Maria Rilke: Immanence

 

Rainer Maria Rilke

From the Book of Hours II 25:

Love Poems to God

translated by Joanne Macy, American born 1929; and Anita Barrows, American, ?DOB

 

All will come again

 

 

 

 

All will come again into its strength:
the fields undivided,  the waters undammed,
the trees towering and the walls built low.

 

 

Life + Continual Growth I, 1988, collage of cut and torn printed papers (color lithographs) with acrylic paint and clear gloss acrylic.

Alvin Loving, 1935-2005, American. ?Location

 

 

 

And in the valleys, people as strong and varied as the land.

 

 

 

 

Study of a Figure in a Landscape, 1952, oil on canvas. 

Francis Bacon, 1909-1992, Irish.  Phillips Collection, Washington, DC

 

 

 

 

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Our Land, 1951, egg tempera on panel, and detail.  

Charles W. White, 1918-1979, American. Private collection on loan to MOMA, NY in 2018

 

 

 

And no churches
where God is imprisoned and lamented
like a trapped and wounded animal.

 

 

 

A Good Circular God, 1948-50, mixed media

Jean Reynal, 1903-1983, American. MOMA, NY

 

 

 

The houses welcoming all who knock
and a sense of boundless offering in all relations,
and in you and me.

 

 

 

Tender Souls, 1995, offset lithograph on paper

Wadsworth Jarrell, American born 1929.  Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia

 

 

No yearning for an afterlife,
no looking beyond,
no belittling of death,

 

 

 

Sixteen Waterfalls of Dreams, Memories, and Sentiment. 1990, oil on canvas.

Pat Steir, American born 1940. Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY

 

 

but only longing for what belongs to us

and serving earth,
lest we remain unused

 

 

 

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The Monet Family at their Garden in Argenteuil, 1874, oil on canvas.

Edouard Manet, 1832-1883, French.  Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY

 

 

and serving earth,
lest we remain unused

 

 

 

Jan’s Garden in July, 2018, oil on linen.

Scott Noel, American born 1955, oil on linen.  Exhibited, courtesy of the actor’s gallery, at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia

 

 

and serving earth,
lest we remain unused

 

 

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 Botanists take a Core Sample of a 350 ft. Redwood Tree, Redwood National Park, California.

  Photograph taken by Michael (Nick) Nichols, 2008.  On display at the Philadelphia Art Museum, summer of 2017

 

 

and serving earth,
lest we remain unused

 

 

Untitled, 2020, bronze. 

Henry Taylor, American born 1956.  Loaned by the artist to the Whitney Museum, NY in 2023

 

 

 

and serving earth,
lest we remain unused

 

 

Tiger, 1940, oil on canvas. 

Morris Hirschfield, 1872-19446, American born Poland. ?Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY

 

 

and serving earth,
lest we remain unused.

 

 

 

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 The Source of Life, oil on canvas, 1890.

Léon Frédéric, 1856-1940, Belgian.  Philadelphia Art Museum

The museum notes that the Symbolist painter is representing hope and a new world: children emerging from a life-giving stream flowing through a fertile world.

 

 

 

 

 

3 thoughts on “Rainer Maria Rilke: Immanence

    1. It is, Tish.

      And so generous because it covers a huge number of activities which we may do as individuals and communities. It includes, of course, your own most recent geomorphological comment.

      And remembering the prayer as a mantra!

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