Margaret Chula
Artist Statement: Talking & Listening to Plants
I’ve always been attuned to nature. Growing up on my grandparent’s eighty-acre tobacco farm in Massachusetts, I knew exactly when mayflowers, Indian paintbrushes, and jack-in-the-pulpits would bloom—and where to find them. I knew the flower’s color, texture, fragrance and whether it could be picked or left alone. When I was nine, my grandmother gave me my own small garden plot, which I planted with Johnny Jump Ups. I loved nurturing those cheerful flowers and watching them thrive. As I’ve grown older, my gardens have become more free-form (“Marriage”), less controlled than when my husband and I weeded grass out of our moss garden in Kyoto with tweezers.
Whenever I travel, I am drawn to the local flora and fauna—the shapes of trees, fragrance of flowers, sounds of bird song. “April in the High Desert”, was written on a writing residency at the Helene Wurlitzer Foundation, where I became enchanted by the beauty of cottonwoods, chamiso, and Chinese elms.
In 1980, my husband and I moved to Japan—the country of Bashō, Buson, Issa, and Shiki. I eagerly learned the Japanese seasonal words necessary to write haiku. For twelve years, I also studied ikebana, the art of flower arrangement. Words like “botan” (peony) and “ajisai” (hydrangea) rolled off my tongue. Learning a language through something you’re passionate about is a great incentive. My writing and spiritual values were shaped by living in Kyoto and practicing both of these arts—ever-present reminders of the changing seasons.
Margaret Chula is the author of fourteen books of poetry, most recently Firefly Lanterns: Twelve Years in Kyoto, which received a NYC 2022 Big Book Award in Multicultural Nonfiction. A featured speaker and workshop leader at haiku conferences around the world, she has also served as president of the Tanka Society of America, Poet Laureate for Friends of Chamber Music, and is currently on the Advisory Board for the Center for Japanese Studies at Portland University. She lives on the Portland skyline with her husband and shares her yard with deer, rabbits, and the occasional coyote.