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White Cat and Notebook: A Still Life
. . . I seem to be able to tell what objects are important to me by what tends that once entered the slim bones and swollen joints another the grit of your radiant cities, brassy off the charged streets, minor chords laddering its scent on the weather. city’s muffled in winter’s cottony greys, as the calendar squares telling these to the anniversary I refuse to mark theories of painting, how the dulled fading in a glass, a frayed jacket, resolve of figural absence denoting presence . . . only in letters, the coruscating poems imagining objects you once touched, Still life, in Diebenkorn’s interpretation . . . is the process of creating an I can plot them on a canvas dummy, straight-pins piercing rounded as Monroe’s, behind it the window mapped with billboards and spiked for the El’s sparking tracks echoing lines of the white cat preening table, circa 1930, in the foreground, perspiring beside pill bottles, their labels dots of prescription type; behind them, coiled, toxic, in the slumbering kit. But no. Louise could not repeat what I could not I sang, hoarse cuckoo with my mainspring . . . represented forms are loaded with psychological Four years and still the images break down. about where you are now, or whether in etherous air. I can’t conjure you of family photos, a translucent bride a slash of ruby pigment darkening of aluminum crutches reflecting Details fail to coalesce. But the carmine from Cuba—when you lose your faith, still blesses my desk, whispers it’s not folly your death, I felt the heat of your living even if it’s true elegy’s fated always, to be first the story of the painter’s for you, paint out everything dispensable your sleek familiar, like Hermes paint in a wash of violet reprinted from Muse (2002) with permission of Southern Illinois University Press
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