Poet
Elmar Kuiper
Elmar Kuiper
(The Netherlands, 1969)
Biography
Elmar Kuiper, born in Sneek, lives and works in the small Friesian village of Huins. He is a trained psychiatric nurse, visual artist and poet, but also makes appearances as a performer, often with Marc Kooij, under the name ‘De Zoete Hanen’. He has so far published one collection of poems, Hertbyt (2004), which earned him a nomination for the Fedde Schurerprijs, a prize for Friesian debut writers. His second collection is due to appear at the end of 2006: Ut namme fan mysels. In 2003 and 2005, he won the Rely Jorritsmaprijs, on both occasions for one of his poems. In spring 2006, a selection of his Friesian poems appeared in Dutch translation, under the title Roep de rottweiler op!/Call the rottweiler! Several of his poems were also included in the dual language collection Dream yn blauwe reinjas/Dream in a blue raincoat.
In the poem ‘Scene’ something similar happens. An existential drama – we are dealing with a ‘broken-hearted lover’ – is apparently observed with a cool, filmic eye: “he bites down on a capsule of blood / to create a dramatic effect.” But the camera-eye view does not remove the dramatic element; it observes it in a veiled and alienated form that raises questions in the reader’s mind. Does the observer – the poet? the person filming? – thus cover up the pain that the drama causes him? Does he perhaps feel guilty because of what he sees? With this technique, Kuiper quickly wrongfoots the reader.
In his recent work Kuiper seems more often to use an I-figure as a home base. But even here he allows the perspective to shift constantly. For example, in the poem ‘I don’t want to spoil the mood’, he introduces a dialogue between an I-figure and a you-figure. The I, who has a pencil, cuts out a bird and sticks it in a ‘red sky’. Clearly, we are dealing with a visual art process here. Then the ‘I’ asks if the ‘you’ is the bird that has been stuck up and the reply is affirmative. Something else strange happens with the pencil: not only has it originally come from a ‘sick tree’, the following is also said about it: “I sharpen the point / the point sharpens you”. We are looking at images placed in a flashing, associative pattern that in some subtle way says something about the dubious position of the artist. That is utterly typical of Elmar Kuiper: in his writing everything is susceptible to doubt, nothing is rooted to the one spot. “that reply sends me back to the drawing board”, he playfully ends the poem. In that case, I would dare to hazard, we are looking at a drawing where the interplay of lines never assumes fixed contours.
© Jabik Veenbaas (Translated by John Irons)
BibliographyPoetry
Hertbyt, Bornmeer, Leeuwarden, 2004
Roep de rottweiler op! / Rop de rottweiler op! (Bilingual edition: Friesian poems, with Dutch translations) Jabik Veenbaas, BnM Uitgevers, Nijmegen, 2005
Ut namme fan mysels, Bornmeer, Leeuwarden, 2006
Hechtzwaluwen, Augustus, Amsterdam, 2010
Granytglimkes, Bornmeer, Leuuwarden, 2011
Hiemsiik, Bornmeer, Leuuwarden, 2015
Ruimtedier, Atlas Contact, Amsterdam, 2016
Stienkeal, Bornmeer, Leuuwarden, 2018
Plays
De Lytse Kannibaal, Elikser, Leeuwarden, 2014
Links
In Dutch
Performances and art by De Zoete Hanen
Poems
Poems of Elmar Kuiper
Sponsors
Partners
LantarenVenster – Verhalenhuis Belvédère