June 03, 2008

let's stay together

The Author to His Body on Their Fifteenth Birthday, 29 ii 80

“There’s never a dull moment in the human body.”
                                           —The Insight Lady

Dear old equivocal and closest friend,
Grand Vizier to a weak bewildered king,
Now we approach The Ecclesiastean Age
Where the heart is like to go off inside your chest
Like a party favor, or the brain blow a fuse
And the comic-book light-bulb of Idea black out
Forever, the idiot balloon of speech
Go blank, and we shall know, if it be knowing,
The world as it was before language once again;

Mighty Fortress, maybe already mined
And readying to blow up grievances
About the lifetime of your servitude,
The body of this death one talkative saint
Wanted to be delivered of (not yet!),
Aggressively asserting your ancient right
To our humiliation by the bowel
Or the rough justice of the elderly lecher’s
Retiring from this incontinence to that;

Dark horse, it’s you we’ve put the money on
Regardless, the parody and satire and
The nevertheless forgiveness of the soul
Or mind, self, spirit, will or whatever else
The ever-unknowable unknown is calling itself
This time around—shall we renew our vows?
How should we know by now how we might do
Divorced? Homely animal, in sickness and health,
For the duration; buddy, you know the drill.

--Howard Nemerov

May 15, 2008

like that

Archaic Torso of Apollo

We cannot know his legendary head
with eyes like ripening fruit. And yet his torso
is still suffused with brilliance from inside,
like a lamp, in which his gaze, now turned to low,

gleams in all its power. Otherwise
the curved breast could not dazzle you so, nor could
a smile run through the placid hips and thighs
to that dark center where procreation flared.

Otherwise this stone would seem defaced
beneath the translucent cascade of the shoulders
and would not glisten like a wild beast's fur:

would not, from all the borders of itself,
burst like a star: for here there is no place
that does not see you. You must change your life.

--Rainer Maria Rilke

February 26, 2008

good call, horace

One more for the road To a Jar of Massic Wine

Corvinus has called for a mellower wine, therefore,
O virtuous jar, born the same year as I,
In the consulship of Manlius, appear,
Descend, bring forth whatever there may be,

Laughter, or quarrelsomeness, sleepiness, or the complaints
Of dejected lovers, whatever it happens to be
The grapes were gathered for to make this Massic,
Mature to be just right for some special occasion.

Soaked in serious studies though he be,
Corvinus is not averse to the pleasure of wine.
Old Cato the stern and righteous, it's said, was accustomed
To use this pleasant means to warm himself up.

Your gentle discipline encourages
The dull to be less dull than usual,
And Bacchus, joyful Deliverer, reveals
What the sober wise man really meant to say.

You bring back hope to the despairing heart
And you give courage to the poor man, so
He's neither scared of tyrants in their crowns
Nor soldiers brandishing their scary weapons.

Bacchus attends thee, and Venus, if she's willing,
And torchlight, and the Graces dancing together,
Until the moment the returning sun
Puts all the stars to flight, and the party's over.

--Horace

February 06, 2008

a conceit comprehensible to fewer each year

Lines & Circularities

on hearing Casals’ recording of Bach’s Sixth Suite

Deep in a time that cannot come again
Bach thought it through, this lonely and immense
Reflexion wherein our sorrows learn to dance.
And deep in a time that cannot come again
Casals recorded it. Playing it back,
And bending now over the instrument,
I watch the circling stillness of the disc,
The tracking inward of the tonearm, enact
A mystery wherein the music shares:
How time, that comes and goes and vanishes,
Never to come again, can come again.

How many silly miracles there are
That will not save us, neither will they save
The world, and yet they are miraculous:
The tonearm following the spiral path
While moving inward on a shallow arc,
Making the music that companions it
Through winding ways to silence at the close;
The delicate needle that navigates these canyons
By contact with the edges, not the floor;
Black plastic that has memorized and kept
In its small striations whatever it was told
By the master’s mind and hand and bow and box,
Making such definite shudderings in the air
That Bach’s intent rises from the tomb . . .
The Earth, that spins around upon herself
In the simple composition of Light and Dark,
And varying her distance on the Sun
Makes up the Seasons and the Years, and Time
Itself, whereof the angels make record;
The Sun, swinging his several satellites
Around himself and slowly round the vast
Galactic rim and out to the unknown
Past Vega at the apex of his path;
And all this in the inward of the mind,
Where the great cantor sings his songs to God . . .

The music dances to its inner edge
And stops. The tonearm lifts and cocks its head
An instant, as if listening for something
That is no longer there but might be; then
Returns to rest, as with a definite click
The whole strange business turns itself off.

--Howard Nemerov

May 21, 2007

no inner resources

God, please, will someone give me something to write about?  I'm dying out here, day after day of nothing interesting and nothing seen.  Wait, that reminds me of . . . Jerry Saltz's recent article in Artnet about Rirkrit Tiravanija and a rehash of relational aesthetics in New York.  A generous excerpt:

For Rirkrit Tiravanija, art is what you eat. This Thai born, New York-Chang Mai-and-Berlin based artist became famous, starting in 1992, when he made "Untitled 1992 (Free)." This sculptural-performance consisted of Tiravanija (pronounced Tea-rah-vah-nit) removing all the contents of the office of the 303 Gallery on Greene Street in SoHo -- including its intrepid dealer, Lisa Spellman -- and setting up a makeshift kitchen complete with a refrigerator, pots, hot plates, rice steamers, folding tables and stools. He then cooked Thai curry; anyone who happened by could serve themselves, sit down and eat. For free.

Back then it was disconcerting and thrilling to be this casual in an art gallery, to go from being a passive viewer to an active participant, and doing it all for free. With this simple, almost metaphysical gesture, Tiravanija transformed the transaction of being in a gallery as viewers came to realize that the art was in them, not just because they ate it, but because all the relations they had there were theirs. In this very tangible, immediate way, Tiravanija seemed to bridge a mind-body gap that often exists in Western art; he was a medicine man artist who literalized art’s primitive functions as sustenance, healing and communion.

Tiravanija subsequently repeated this cooking-as-art sculpture all over the world. So much that by the late 1990s he was in danger of branding himself as the happy Thai guy who cooks. This obscured the latent identity-politics prickliness in his work. Often, Tiravanija prepares food the first day of an event then substitutes a Thai cook thereafter. All this is not only reminiscent of the cagy ways Andy Warhol sent surrogates to give lectures for him and let himself be thought of as a village idiot, the disordered highly social situations Tiravanija sets up also mimic Warhol’s Factory in that they provide unstable, clubby environments where people can act out, and every kind of behavior is sanctioned.

Far be it from me to harsh on free food.  And I haven't seen the exhibition, or anything by Tiravanija.  But this strikes me as less "disconcerting and thrilling" than really dull, the acting out of ideas that weren't new when John Cage explored them decades ago.  At least Robert Rauschenberg had the decency to "act in the gap between life and art" rather than just give us the former.  Saltz's comparison to Warhol doesn't in my mind complicate matters in the way he thinks it does; there's a great difference between hoaxing the rubes by sending an impostor and having a real cook serve gallery visitors.  While at some point in time, generally adolescence, everyone needs an environment to "act out," one would hope that Saltz would be more clear minded than to gush over one in which "every kind of behavior is sanctioned"--if he, or the artist, meant that seriously, which I suspect they do not.

But all that gets away from the main point, which is, to borrow from John Berryman, that "Life, friends, is boring."  We must not say so, of course, now more than ever apparently, but it remains true: add some art to it if you want me to care.  Serving up trivialities as epiphanies doesn't impress.  W.  J. T. Mitchell, I think in an essay in this volume, tried to turn Berryman to his own purposes by declaring that "Landscape, friends, is boring."  Quite apart from the fact that Mitchell didn't seem to notice that Berryman's poem immediately turned to landscape imagery, undermining his appropriation, landscapes could not possibly be any duller than some dude cooking rice.  Of course, Berryman wrote that literature and art bored, too, but he had problems.  Anyway, the more I read Saltz's article, the more unintentional comedy I see; maybe I was wrong--the artworld has humor after all, just not on purpose.

May 19, 2007

rat bastard

"The poet is the weak criminal whose confession implicates the others."

--Howard Nemerov

March 29, 2007

it makes us weep a bit for gratitude

First Sight

Lambs that learn to walk in snow
When their bleating clouds the air
Meet a vast unwelcome, know
Nothing but a sunless glare.
Newly stumbling to and fro
All they find, outside the fold,
Is a wretched width of cold.

As they wait beside the ewe,
Her fleeces wetly caked, there lies
Hidden round them, waiting too,
Earth's immeasureable surprise.
They could not grasp it if they knew,
What so soon will wake and grow
Utterly unlike the snow.

--Philip Larkin

September 10, 2006

how to hold the axe to make its handle

To Lu Chi

(author of the Wen Fu, or Prose Poem
on the Art of Letters, A.D. 302
)

Old sir, I think of you in this tardy spring,
Think of you for, maybe, no better reason
Than that the apple branches in the orchard
Bear snow, not blossoms, and that this somehow
Seems oddly Chinese.  I too, when I walk
Around the orchard, pretending to be a poet
Walking around the orchard, feel Chinese,
A silken figure on a silken screen
Who tries out with his eye the apple branches,
The last year’s shriveled apples capped with snow,
The hungry birds.  And then I think of you.

Continue reading "how to hold the axe to make its handle" »

July 09, 2006

american idol

To Whistler, American 

On the loan exhibit of his paintings at the Tate Gallery.

You also, our first great,
Had tried all ways;
Tested and pried and worked in many fashions,
And this much gives me heart to play the game.

Here is a part that's slight, and part gone wrong,
And much of little moment, and some few
Perfect as Dürer!

"In the Studio" and these two portraits, if I had my choice!
And then these sketches in the mood of Greece?

You had your searches, your uncertainties,
And this is good to know—for us, I mean,
Who bear the brunt of our America
And try to wrench her impulse into art.

You were not always sure, not always set
To hiding night or tuning "symphonies";
Had not one style from birth, but tried and pried
And stretched and tampered with the media.

You and Abe Lincoln from that mass of dolts
Show us there's chance at least of winning through.

--Ezra Pound

June 29, 2006

ain't much changed

The Most Expensive Picture in the World

We stand in line all morning long to see it,
And finally when we do come face to face
With the seamy canvas and its crackling glaze,
Where the figures hover and glow from a black smoke
Of dried and crusted oils, we are impressed—
How could we fail to be impressed? and yet
With a distinct sense of something’s having failed.
The most expensive picture in the world?
Either we are edified by that, or else
Not edified at all; though someone says,
Just as we leave, a rather thoughtful thing
That might have saved the day if saying could:
“It is the most expensive picture, yes,
                 But only in the world.”

--Howard Nemerov

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