Georgia Ann Banks-Martin

Georgia Ann Banks-Martin
3066 Zelda Rd 384
Montgomery, AL 36106
United States

georgiabanksmartin@yahoo.com

  • Bio
  • Interviews
  • Rhapsody for Lessons Learned or Remembered
    • Book Trailer
    • Madonna and Child
    • Seasonal Rain
    • Woman in Green Coat
    • Piano Lesson
    • Portrait of American Hope
    • South Carolina Morning
    • Reviews
    • Signed Copies
    • Recordings
  • Maturing
  • Uncollected Works: While Driving
    • Child to Mother
    • Memorial Day 2007
    • Gaia's Men
  • Other Poets you Should Meet

 

Cover

 



 

 

 Cover art: Ghost Cacoon

by

Samantha Ainsley

 

 

Georgia Banks-Martin walks us through an art gallery. We view art, which she has processed and questioned, through her lens: Lawrence, Monet, Van Gogh, Beardon, Sargent, Degas, to name a few of the artists. She challenges the reader to face slavery, grief, and joy, to feel the weight the South bears, to examine art across centuries for lessons. These poems revive what has been omitted in our history books-individual life stories. She uses sound, music and voice to make imagery pulse in these ekphrastic poems. In her poem "Railroad Station," after a Jacob Lawrence: "Those leaving the towns where father and mother/labored in fields without being offered a yard of thread spun/from the cotton they pulled, have assembled./Packed: Hopes of work, three bedroom homes/water heated in water tanks, classrooms." As memories populate her poems, so does the theme of hope permeate her book; in Death Dancing, after a Max Slevogt: "I wish memories could be buried as easily as bodies." . . . a book to remember as you stand face to face with art.

Julene Tripp Weaver
Author of No Father Can Save Her















 

Georgia Ann Banks-Martin
3066 Zelda Rd 384
Montgomery, AL 36106
United States

georgiabanksmartin@yahoo.com