Showing posts with label Modern Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Modern Art. Show all posts

Monday, September 27, 2010

September 26: Lane Falcon



My dear friend Lane Falcon is in her final year at Sarah Lawrence in poetry although she's managed to cover a fair amount of fiction as well. Her poem and observations follow.

Jackson Pollack’s  “Autumn Rhythm”
To him, to live
was to be entwined— to stand outside
that nest of rusted wire
was to die. 

Observations

As usual, lovely to see Caitlin, with whom I can talk in tongues about art and poems and people. Going to The Met made me want to get fired from my job and collect unemployment for a few months, like my sister. If only we were allowed to drink coffee in there, it would be the perfect place to hibernate. I almost ran over a couple of little old ladies but that’s nothing new and luckily no one cursed me. Caitlin seems very at home among the sculptures and canvases and, at the same time, tentative, respectful. I’ve never been so close to a Pollack painting, I don’t think. Just prior to us sitting down, I’d been telling Caitlin how I never really thought of Pollack paintings as visceral, despite something I read recently that compared his painting to the poems of Sharon Olds. His stuff always seemed so abstract to me in comparison to Sharon Olds’ version of urgency. Sitting there, though, I kept thinking how art is a metaphor for the artist’s perception of the world (duh!) and how immediate and seething his painting is. Not every emotion has a perfectly carved image to represent it. I think, in poetry, this sort of effect can be likened to the use of diction, music as opposed to image. Music is as immediate as image, right, as far as plucking at the soul strings (pun intended, but only after realizing it was there)?


Sunday, September 26, 2010

September 26



I met Lane Falcon a dear friend and Sarah Lawrence poet at the steps today. Tom Lux once said that Lane Falcon is the perfect name for a poet, and who am I to disagree?

We had a lovely time wandering. Lane touched a sarcophagus and the guard was nice about it. We ended up in the Modern Art section, which was not too busy today, but I still somehow found it hard to write.




We Lift

all these words to you
and still are left
wanting more seeds,
more rosemary, more cadmium.

The garden grows zucchini
into a jungle for squirrels,
and I keep finding dirt clad children
digging for potatoes.

We need squash for soup,
for a winter of prayer, 
of waiting. For others. 
For order? The return of you?



  
Factors
Day of the Week: Sunday
Occupancy of the Museum: Busy
Arrived at: 2:30
Departed at: 4:00
Read on Commute:  Cider House Rules by John Irving, and Made to Stick by Chip and Dan Heath

Sunday, September 5, 2010

September, 5th





The Met was very busy today and I found myself wandering aimlessly into the Modern Art section, which was slightly more peaceful. As I passed a Roy Lichtenstein a preteen boy in a Pink Floyd T-shirt said to his father loudly "If we leave here right now, you don't even have to buy me a watch".

I sat in front of Jackson Pollock's Autumn Rhythm (Number 30). I wrote for a while when a toddler ran at the painting excitedly exclaiming "Glow Paint! Glow Paint!" only to be told otherwise by his mother.

I wrote a lot today but most of it didn't turn out well, but I do have one small offering. Below is a photo of the page I wrote with first edits added in at an Upper West Side Starbucks.



Secret Sharer

A five hour flight away,
to say nothing of airport security.

I can call from the front stoop
to the freeway, your artery, the gap

between work and La Brea
I fill, you mend

a heated walk.
We vault worries,

embed the other's
life within.



Factors
Day of the Week: Sunday
Occupancy of Museum: Busy, loud.
Arrived at: 12:00
Departed at: 1:25
Read on Commute: Chronic City by Jonathan Lethem