Issue > Editor's Note
The Mill / Housatonic
Pastels, 7X10
by Wendy Goldberg

Editor's Note

The Cortland Review celebrates Issue 75's cover artist, Wendy Goldberg. Wendy studied art at Cornell University where she "fell in love," she says, "with the moody, dynamic skies and landscape." Variously described as "Intimist, Tonalist and Impressionist," Wendy's atmospheric, semi-abstract, luminous rural and urban landscapes have an eerie expressiveness--her intention is to draw out the essential mood of a subject through simplicity and suggestion.

She attempts to distill what is "mysterious, ephemeral and often dreamlike. Objects and images, which by daylight seem incidental and commonplace, become simplified and extraordinary at night under limited or artificial light in compositions that speak as much about form and abstract shape as they do about atmosphere and essence. The Cortland Review invites you, reader, into Issue 75 the same way Wendy invites you into "The Mill / Housatonic." Find more of Wendy Goldberg's work online and discover why she's in both public and private collections throughout the county and abroad.

For more art in our pages, turn to the poetry of Chris Anderson, Merry Benezra, Kathleen Boyle, Meg Boyles, Angela M. Brandt, James Ricks Carson, Shannon Castleton, Anne Champion, Michael Chitwood, Liz Dolan, Zach Groesbeck, Luke Hankins, Kevin King, Justin Lowe, Michael J. Ortiz, Jenny Sadre-Orafai, Jacqueline Hughes Simon, Carl Watts and Phillip Donald Wenturine. The there's the fiction of Hugh Burkhart, Daniel Ross Goodman and Emma Robinson. Wander, too, through Dante's world with David Rigsbee's "Introduction to Dante's Paradiso".

The Cortland Review staff as well as its contributors thank you, our readers. All of this is for you.
Cheers!
Ginger Murchison
Editor in Chief



Poetry

Kathleen Boyle

Kathleen Boyle
In Summer

Fiction

Emma Robinson

Emma Robinson
Something To Cry About

Poetry

Meg Boyles

Meg Boyles
Milan