I don’t write in a journal everyday, but I have accumulated many entries over the past 50+ years beginning in 1966. Some items evolved into longer works. Among the leftovers little pieces survived. I thought a collection of these with a piece culled from the same date in a past year would make an interesting yearbook. The consistencies and inconsistencies of mind, skipping back and forth across time, provide varied perspectives. It is difficult to remember the context of the past we’ve lived; we also make suppositions about times that predate ourselves.

The few alterations from original drafts were to improve clarity. The worst of my work is not included. There remains enough mediocrity and immaturity to make me feel humble and you feel smart. There are also moments of accidental insight and incidental humor.

Author Stephen Crane referred to his little pieces as pills…apparently they were small and somewhat hard to swallow, but good for you.


Comments Welcome!

Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Art Work


November 22, 1991  (I was 47)

                             Art Work
Twenty-eight years after that gray day at the tv in Minnesota
(That thankless November began the coldest of winters.)
I’m in Washington D.C. ignoring gray rain,
avoiding wet turf at Arlington Cemetery, and its flame,
standing in the Hirshhorn Gallery, second floor near the escalator.

A Robert Motherwell collage done in November of ‘73
looks at first flippant- a crude presidential portrait
torn from packaging cardboard with two labels attached-
a baggage sticker from JFK airport
and directly above it an inverted mailing lablel
addressed to Motherwell in N.Y. from a California company
called Gemini.

A seam of packing tape bisects the two labels.
The mailing label is part of the right temple of the President’s profile.
The JFK sticker is on his right cheek.
(If the taped seam were folded upon itself,
the label and the sticker would meet face to face.)

The shoulders and the chest of the forward leaning figure
are formed entirely as a larged painted red heart
beneath the cardboard head.
The figure is surrounded by rough-brushed yellow-brown.
Dry brushstrokes in the background color imply the Kennedy hair
around the pasteboard face.
His corrugated eye was meticulously torn,

and then I notice the horrible familiarity
of that forward leaning pose.
And isn’t that a big D brushed in behind the President’s head?
And those spatters of darker brown in front of the throat,
and that faintly indicated right arm reaching
with the hand to the throat.

And the packing tape seam is at the flap
of the awful grassy knoll wound.
And Motherwell’s name is above the seam
though it is still,
at this moment, attached, and the piece
is called Gemini.

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