Friday, July 21, 2023

At the fine art museum

CLICK HEAR TO HERE AUTHOR READ


expensive paintings on the wall 

priceless comes to mind 

you browse

without touching

lean in to read the small card

bottom right

Artist Title Date

search for the story

told inside the frame 

hear echoes 

of syncopated footsteps

nervous cough stabbing 

the tense silence

and your beating heart

like something out of Poe

the presence of

anonymous

circulating beings

closing in 

and in particular 

the one standing

behind you craning

to get a view

begin to feel slightly nauseous 

paranoid

the uniformed security guard 

in the corner 

trying to look inconspicuous 

and you try  

to go about your business

but it's no use 

you've been trying  

and trying 

but just don't get it

and you need to sit down

you're exhausted 

depleted

deflated

you look around

don't understand

can no longer feign interest

and she suspects

as you do 

that you don't belong

you're a phony

inauthentic

unoriginal

worthless comes to mind

and you must leave

or risk

making a scene.

3 comments:

  1. This poem feels beige and brown; depressing for the poet, which I suppose is the intent. The museum doesn’t feel alive (again, intent?) and the poetic slide into the walls closing in can be felt by the reader. Narrator wants to get out of the museum, so does the reader. The narrator’s sense of low worth is painful to read. On first reading the poem doesn’t seem like much; it requires several readings to appreciate its meaning.

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    Replies
    1. Exactly! Never felt depressed in a fine arts museum? Overwhelmed and exhausted? I have. There is something oppressive about museums.

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  2. Lots of great "hidden" rhymes and echoes. Almost like they are echoing in the halls of the museum. I love the devolution from "priceless" to "worthless" ... the priceless artwork ultimately makes the poet feel worthless. It's the opposite of what art is supposed to do.

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