Within the visual arts of painting and photography, Martha Ronk finds an
undeniable presence lurking: silence. This character slips into pauses,
hides between images, and expertly evades the grasp of language. Ronk
shows us that what is hidden just off screen in these images might just
be the force that gives them power. The poems in Silences seek
possibilities of how to form language from a phenomenon that so
earnestly resists it. Rather than coax silence out of hiding, Ronk's
poems respond to its mysterious presence through questions and
conjecture.
These poems endeavor to give a much-deserved voice to silence,
addressing the power of what is not seen. While silence remains
perpetually out of reach, Ronk invites us to follow the language that
creeps up to its edges. The poems in this collection form an inquiry
that moves through the presence of silence and reveals insights into the
character of the visual art in which it lives.