E K P H R A S I S is a rhetorical device, in which one medium of art relates to another medium by describing its essence and form, and in
doing so, connects more directly to the audience. A descriptive work of prose or poetry may thus highlight what is shown in any of the visual arts, enhancing the original art and taking on a life of its own through its
description. Virtually any type of artistic media may be the actor of, or subject of ekphrasis. In this way, a poem may re-present a painting, or vice versa. *
In this book there are eight poems about the author’s previously completed oil and watercolor paintings, a pencil sketch about one poem, and a watercolor sketch about another poem.
* Wikipedia
关于作者
David Mc Cauley was born in St. Petersburg, FL, in 1943. He was raised in Daly City & Millbrae,
went to high school and junior college in San Mateo, and graduated with a BS degree in Civil
Engineering from San Jose State University, all in California. He doodled in school and was
infl uenced by the works and lives of Vincent Van Gogh and Salvadore Dali.
In his mid-twenties, employed as a hydraulic engineer by the Los Angeles Dept. of Water & Power,
he dabbled with how-to-paint books, drawing on sketch pads and painting on small canvas boards.
While working for the USDA Forest Service as a civil/environmental engineer, marriage and family
took precedence over art from 1970 to 1998. He learned matting & framing, watercolor & oil
painting at the Recreation & Parks District and at Mt. Diablo Adult Education (MDAE) in Pleasant Hill,
CA, in the late ‘90s. Retirement in 2001 allowed more time for painting classes.
His Artist Statement reads, “As far back as I can remember I have been enchanted by the beauty
of nature . . . majestic mountains, wild coastland, colorful skies, and mystic forests. This beauty
is especially moving to me when the sun is low, and its light is fi ltered through dust and clouds to
form spectacular, vibrant scenes.”
Since 2002, under the guidance of Elaine Starkman at MDAE, David learned to write memoirs and
(since 2006) poetry. She encouraged him to pursue his idea of combining the two art forms . . .
painting and poetry.