The Synesthetic Gypsy: Sally Cook on Paint, Poetry, and Paradox

Notes turn into syllables; musical tones bleed into color. For Sally Cook, the boundaries between the audible and the visual were never solid walls, but rather permeable membranes. A poet and painter residing in upstate New York, Cook’s artistic identity was forged in the fires of a complex, three-way domestic war—and refined through a life that refused the “lavender fog” of indeterminate art.

From the age of four, the piano was not a toy but a discipline. Cook’s childhood at “Tall Trees”—a name she found excessively redundant even as a child—was dominated by two matriarchal forces. Berenice, her mother, championed the architecture of language. Maud, her paternal grandmother and a concert pianist, controlled the realm of sound.

These women did not offer their gifts lightly; they weaponized them in a battle for the child’s intelligence. While Berenice used poetic inquiries to challenge domestic drudgery, Maud sent “The Word.” It arrived in worn, faded envelopes—a single vocabulary word, phonetically spelled, defined, and embedded in a story. It was a steel-tipped arrow designed to pierce the consciousness.

Sally Cook, poet and painterSally Cook, poet and painter

The lessons were Spartan. Love was demonstrated through grammatical defense and hand positioning on the keys. Yet, this pressure cooker induced a rare synaesthesia. Cook began to perceive the depth of a largo or the sharp bite of pizzicato as visual textures.

Her father, a man of religious severity who saw the world in biblical hierarchies, viewed his daughter as a Mary Magdalene figure, ranking below even the weeds in the lawn. This tension birthed a rebellion painted in fuchsia and chartreuse.

Cook fell in love with the skunk. To her, the despised animal was a symbol of her own low social standing—compact, shy, yet universally reviled. She painted them not in their natural black and white, but in blinding acid greens and purples. It was an early brush with the surreal, a realization that one could alter nature’s palette without divine retribution.

When family judgment culminated in a banishment to a boarding school, Cook arrived wearing a red hat with a feather, stepping into a world of “Bombay market” chaos. Here, breaking the rules became a creative necessity. She and her cohort did not sneak out to drink; they broke into the art studio through a coal chute. Covered in dust, they painted furiously until dawn—ghostly houses, gnarled trees, crashing waves. This illicit portfolio eventually bought her freedom in the form of an art school scholarship.

The trajectory of a “gypsy” led her eventually to the gritty lofts of the Bowery and the fabled Tenth Street of New York City. It was the era of Abstract Expressionism, yet Cook found the scene stifling.

She expected a collision of ideas. She found a congregation of conformists. The Tenth Street painters were consumed by the romantic myth of Jackson Pollock, hero-worshipping the drunken blaze of glory rather than dissecting the intellectual mechanics of the art. When she asked why they painted to the edge of the canvas, the answer was a shrug. Cynicism roiled the streets. They chased fame; she chased the synthesis of form and spirit.

Cook retreated to upstate New York to refine her own language—one of Magical Realism and paradox.

Her philosophy centers on the unexpected. A table slants upward, yet the fruit bowl defies gravity. People stand on firm ground but appear to float. She rejects the incoherence of much modern art, viewing it as a calculated technique to confuse. Instead, she looks back to the early Renaissance—Giotto, the Brueghels, Piero Della Francesca.

Technically, she favors acrylics for their layering potential, building glazes that trap light in ways slow-drying oils cannot. The result is art that is sharp, incisive, and bears the mark of truth.

“Paradox sparks all life and art,” Cook asserts. A crouching cat stalking a bird stands for all conflict. Her work remains impossible to categorize, existing “on the slant,” where the rigorous discipline of her grandmother’s piano lessons meets the wild, gypsy spirit of a skunk painted in purple.

Books remain her constant. Inside their faded covers, they wait to rescue her from the swamps of dullness. For Cook, art is not about being indeterminate. It is about the permanent things—the clarity of a symbol, the weight of a syllable, and the vibrant, dreamlike color of a reality reimagined.