Words with Pictures

Words with Pictures is a weekly two-part post that pairs photographers and writers. The first week, a writer is given a photograph to inspire the creation of a new piece of writing. The following week the photographer is given a piece of writing and responds with a new photographic piece. This series is curated by Conveyor Editor Dominica Paige.

 Anne-E. Wood and Tyler Wriston { Part 1 }

Party Time

It’s not that I think he’s still here, his ghost or anything, restless and haunting these woods.  Why did I come, then?  It’s my birthday, I’m thirty-four, so twenty years have passed.  What have I done with them?  Nobody knows where I am right now.  I’ve still got the knife he loved with the rusty handle, and the picture of a boat he said was my gift.  Listen, I say to the garbage can.  I’m having my own party again, I’m not going to lie…but no truth comes either.  There’s a horrible moon, this yellow gash in the sky.  I want to walk further into the dark, beyond the stream, over the little bridge, find the rock where he sat when I left him, an eight-year-old with his head in his hands, and then further still, to places that don’t exist.  I will tonight.  I’m buzzed off all this quiet.  I step forward, a little unsteady, my sneakers squishing in the grass.  The light turns on, a glaring demon.  My face is red in front of the world.  I’ve got this problem, I say to my shoelaces. I want to talk to you. I can’t sleep. They say, You can barely stand.


Anne-E. Wood’s work has appeared in the magazines Tin House, New Letters, and Gargoyle, among others. She holds an MFA from San Francisco State University and teaches writing at Rutgers University and Gotham Writers’ Workshop.  She lives in Brooklyn and is working on a novel.

Tyler Wriston has a BFA in Photography from Pratt Institute.  He is presently completing his MS in Art Direction BrandCenter for Art Direction in Richmond, Virginia. 

His work can be found at: { www.tylercampbellwriston.com }


Words with Pictures

Words with Pictures is a weekly two-part post that pairs photographers and writers. The first week, a writer is given a photograph to inspire the creation of a new piece of writing. The following week the photographer is given a piece of writing and responds with a new photographic piece. This series is curated by Conveyor Editor Dominica Paige.

Evan Rehill and Dominica Paige {Part 2}

THE LEADING MAN

You know what they say about the hands and feet?  None of it’s true.  But what they say about the nose? It is.  Listen to me talking to you.  Ignore my hands and feet.  Pay attention to the schnoz.  All leading men lead with their noses.  I wanted to be a leading man.  I had a girl who said, Get your little mittens off the cantaloupes, another who said, You can’t kick into these sheets with sparrow’s feet.  I said pay attention to the nose.  Another said, You should get the nose fixed.  I said you only fix a broken thing.  She broke my nose.  I cried like a prom queen.  She kissed the blood from my lips.  I climbed into her tiara.  That was ten million years ago.  Look at me now.  Listen to my nose telling you what’s true.


Evan Rehill’s work has been published in Open City, American Short Fiction, Instant City, and 14 Hills.  He teaches at Pratt Institute and Rutgers University.  Robotic arms:{ www.evanrehill.com}

Dominica Paige works as an Editor for Conveyor and curates Words with Pictures.  She wanted to get in on the fun, too. {www.dominicapaige.com}

Words with Pictures

Words with Pictures

Words with Pictures is a weekly two-part post that pairs photographers and writers. The first week, a writer is given a photograph to inspire the creation of a new piece of writing. The following week the photographer is given a piece of writing and responds with a new photographic piece. This series is curated by Conveyor Editor Dominica Paige.

Evan Rehill and Dominica Paige {Part 1}

I could murder her right now. I just got off the graveyard.  My eyes are bloodshot and sore from the cigarettes and too much coffee.  There’s a rip in my stocking.  My uniform has a gravy stain over the heart.  I’m nineteen years old and feel dead already.  I’m walking home when I see her in the vines.  Two skinny legs, a plastic sword.  Sixteen years old and still thinks the world is make-believe.  The world will make you believe, I tell her and she looks out a window while I smoke at the kitchen table, counting tips.  Then she picks up her little-kid sword and goes out slaying dragons and knights in shiny armors.  A sister is a terrible thing to have.  I want to go to her, fall on her sword and smack her awake already.  But I don’t.  I keep going through the vines, pretend she doesn’t exist.   


Evan Rehill’s work has been published in Open City, American Short Fiction, Instant City, and 14 Hills.  He teaches at Pratt Institute and Rutgers University.  Robotic arms:{www.evanrehill.com}

Dominica Paige works as an editor for Conveyor and curates Words with Pictures.  She wanted to get in on the fun, too. {www.dominicapaige.com}

Words with Pictures 

Words with Pictures is a weekly two-part post that pairs photographers and writers. The first week, a writer is given a photograph to inspire the creation of a new piece of writing. The following week the photographer is given a piece of writing and responds with a new photographic piece. This series is curated by Conveyor Editor Dominica Paige.

Leif Huron and Jane Flett {Part 2}

I bunked off today.
 
I closed the laptop lid and cooed, “Hush child, stay here; I promise I’ll return.”
 
The sun had already sucked the water from the marshland.  All that was left was spittle and dandelion clocks, fragments of glass glittering like the mosaics of waterfalls.
 
A Hasidic Jew cycled by through the grass.  It was strange to see him there, so far from town.  He looked like a black paper doorway pasted onto a painting of summer.
 
I did not try to step through him.
 
I was busy counting the buttercups and the daisies and recording the tallies in a squared maths jotter.  So far, the daisies were trouncing the buttercups seventy-nine to forty and it seemed the buttercups were losing faith, preparing themselves for the button-lipped disappointment of the car ride home.
 
I was holding out, however, even allowing a jaunty cirrus to distract me from a daisy clump or two: “Aloha, buddy! How’s the view up there?”
 
/

I have always had a thing for the underdog.
 
At the end of the marshes lay the octopus tree, beckoning for a hug with his open branches.  There was nothing to do but clamber, scuff-kneed, into the boughs.
 
I found a nook to rest my cheek against and inhaled the smell of broken pencils.  I knew I would be safe here from the protestations of the working week, from its spindly, tyrannous fingers.
 
I knew, if I wanted it, the afternoon was mine. I was free as a feather to play kiss chase with my brain.



Jane Flett lives in London where she writes stories, plays synthpunk cello solos and drinks too much gin. You can visit her at: {www.janeflett.com}

Leif Huron studied film direction and cinematography at the Academy of Film, Television and Performing Arts in Prague, CZ.  His films and photographs have been featured as part of the American Photo 2008 Photos of the Year competition, Rush Arts Gallery Freeze Frame exhibition at Art Basel Miami, VUU Collective 2011 Group Show at K&K Gallery, and at Diagonale 2011 Film Festival, Graz, Austri, among others.  He is currently a Candidate for MFA in Photography and Related Media at Parsons The New School for Design. Leif lives and works in Brooklyn.  {www.leifhuron.com}

Words with Pictures

Words with Pictures is a weekly two-part post that pairs photographers and writers. The first week, a writer is given a photograph to inspire the creation of a new piece of writing. The following week the photographer is given a piece of writing and responds with a new photographic piece. This series is curated by Conveyor Editor Dominica Paige.

Leif Huron and Jane Flett {Part 1}

leif Huron

It’s the morning after and we are standing in the kitchen like cacti on the opposite sides of an open road pelting through the desert.

Camilla’s prettier than a coconut shy, legs like a lily’s stamen. And I know I shouldn’t have, but.

We got gin-drunk at the fair. Our edges slackened like jumble-sale cardigan buttons; we giggled at the hoopla boy’s scowl.

The air was burnt popcorn promises but we grew tired of those childish songs. So we ran, our feet slapping on the parched earth like silver screen heroines furious with the infidelities of their leading men.

We left behind the one-eyed swordsman who cut his girl in two, left the bearded lady with her sad magazine-advert eyes, left the Mexican midget and his tightrope (so small a tightrope, so close to the ground.)

We reached the bales. Sat dangle-legged and picnicked on hunks of watermelon. She bit into hers and the juices dribbled down her chin and it looked sticky as the floor when

the lights come up, the music dwindles, the boys go home. And I didn’t mean to but the sun was throbbing and

I licked her.

I licked her syrup-pink candyfloss chin, softer than camisoles on skinned knees.

And before I could explain, she was gone.

/

It’s the morning after and we are standing in the kitchen like cacti and I open my lips to say I’m sorry but

there are pits in my teeth as black and patent as London cabs, so I hail one

realising it’s time

to leave.



Jane Flett lives in London where she writes stories, plays synthpunk cello solos and drinks too much gin. You can visit her at: {www.janeflett.com}

Leif Huron studied film direction and cinematography at the Academy of Film, Television and Performing Arts in Prague, CZ.  His films and photographs have been featured as part of the American Photo 2008 Photos of the Year competition, Rush Arts Gallery Freeze Frame exhibition at Art Basel Miami, VUU Collective 2011 Group Show at K&K Gallery, and at Diagonale 2011 Film Festival, Graz, Austri, among others.  He is currently a Candidate for MFA in Photography and Related Media at Parsons The New School for Design. Leif lives and works in Brooklyn.  {www.leifhuron.com}