Diane Lansing

contributor to 2 posters

  • A colorful dragonfly lands on the surface of a lake

    Poet

    Round Lake's Cloud and Tree

    There is nowhere I feet closer to God than when I am in nature. My favorite walk is around Green Lakes, especially once I get to smaller Round Lake, which gives me a more intimate, immediate connection to what feels holy in the world. It is always different—as with the dragonfly's kiss momentarily rearranging the reflections—and yet I always feel welcomed home as I am embraced by the trees, the springy response of the soft path underfoot.

    Growing up I used to write a lot of haiku; a few were even published in the school district's literary magazine. I was going to be an English teacher but became an art teacher instead. This wonderful Poster Project has brought me 'round circle, reconnecting me with both my loves in one poster. What a privilege and a delight!

  • Illustration of Elizabeth Cotten at Libba Cotten Park, Syracuse

    Poet

    Hop The Cotten-picking

    When I was eight, I started writing poetry which sparked my ongoing love of playing with words to express feelings and create magic. When I was nine, I fell in love with folk music, that passion also continues to this day! To combine my two loves for the Poster Project has been sheer delight for me. I first heard Libba Cotten’s toe-tapping “Freight Train” when I was 12, the same age Libba was when she wrote it! Because she was left-handed, she kept borrowing her brother’s guitar on the sly. Libba taught herself to play guitar upside down and backwards, creating her “Cotten-picking” style with just two fingers!

    For years “Freight Train” was attributed to other writers, until a good deed done by Libba connected her with Pete Seeger’s family, by chance, fate, or karma. After that the world got to hear Libba playing her own songs out front!