Incomplete Lioness
By Linda Bierds
Or lion. Too little marble left for certainty:
affixed to a bone-like armature, just a flank
and scored shoulder, and far down the missing,
crouching shape, a single, splay-toed paw.
The companion, or mate, is better formed
and offers a template to trace a bit, image to absence
to memory, until the lioness fills.
The exhibit is Fragments and Dislocations:
Sight and Sightlessness. Across the room
in Renaissance, the painter, retinas tattered
as a saint's hem, might have filled a lioness
differently: absence first, then memory,
and then the lines around his own vision, its crags
and wilderness. His century failed him,
a placard says. Just eye-lid balms
and powdered rhubarb. What retina remained
must have caught his subject's chosen states--penitence
and ecstasy--nearsightedly, which would explain
the perfect stones, less perfect trees. Or perhaps
his partial sightlessness was corneal, and thus
the painting's mood, front-lit through gauze.
In either case, what the painter knew--that his saint
and tiny crucifix would not adorn an altarpiece--
comes to us more slowly. Wood grains,
punch patterns, and the small keyhole
beneath a varnished leaf, suggest a sacristy cupboard,
not worship's place, but preservation's.
Chosen states, the placard said.
Vacancy and memory. Ecstasy and penitence.
And then, His partial vision of the whole
produced a partial masterpiece:
a saint--Jerome--and grizzled robe, flawless
in its dust. The rest is incomplete, but zero-mass
radiography, its lights and darks reversed,
reveals a shape beneath the scene:
Jerome as just two simple lines, white arc
across white axis--before they both were white-
washed over, and the saint began,
and umber brought the lion to him.
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I had a bunch of work to do on Friday, distracted by gorgeous weather and various kid-related chores, like picking up Adam from the slumber party he was at watching movies all night and bringing him home to go out to lunch with my father and Daniel. I finished a review of Deep Space Nine's "Who Mourns For Morn" and finished a dorky Barbie jewelry project too. The bunnies were hiding during the day but two of the babies were chasing each other around toward evening.
Adam went to a graduation party in the evening; the rest of us had dinner with my parents, then came home and watched the second half of the Labyrinth miniseries, which would have been rather confusing had I not read the books, since a lot was compressed or left out. Then, since Daniel had not seen it, we watched X-Men: First Class (yes that's twice this week, shut up). Here are some pictures of flowers from Longwood Gardens earlier this spring:
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