BEAUTY AND POETRY |||||||||||||||| POETS WEARING MACTAGGART
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Cynthia Arrieu-King teaches at Stockton University and lives in the multiverse. Her collaborative book of poems with Hillary Gravendyk will come out from 1913 Press in early 2016. She is making a Tibetan snow lion costume and boiling potatoes.
Cynthia is wearing the Mactaggart one-of-a-kind beaded collar for strengthened armor-like beauty.
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LA VOIX DU SANG
The master is laconic, but his paintings talk. Rather, Loulou the Pomeranian corrects himself, the master was laconic. Now especially that Magritte has gone, Loulou walks back and forth before the pictures, listening to them whisper, missing his dead master. He wishes for more songs upon their upright piano, more pretty evenly matched games of chess.
Blood will tell. The voice of blood. This image confesses a tree with a cylindrical cupboard for a trunk, containing a white globe and a house with a lamp lit in every room. The illumination makes Loulou feel less gloomy. Georgette is still here, and they still have their house.
Loulou pricks his ears toward the call of blood, and hears the years to come coming: their old apartment in Jette will become a house-museum, stuffed – like this tree – with beautiful stuff. Loulou himself – or the last Loulou Georgette possesses when she dies, too, some twenty years hence – will also be stuffed, his dog-body filled with taxidermical stuffing. He will rest unmoving, white fur puffed, atop an empty bed.
The master’s eyes are closed forever, never again to peer at the peerless blue of his paintings’ skies, never again to hear the sound of small bells, his beloved grelots. Loulou remembers how, when he was a puppy, he thought the clappers inside the spheres must be the bells’ hearts, and how when he artlessly admitted this, Georgette and the master had laughed and laughed – not at, but with him – and ruffled the fur at the scruff of his neck.
Gaston Bachelard said, “Miniature is one of the refuges of greatness.” Naturally, Lou-Lou is biased, but he is inclined to agree: concentration and potency. The house-museum will be a small one, naturally, but somehow it will suggest enigmatic measurements. Each night, curtains will hide what is of no earthly use.
Kathleen Rooney is a founding editor of Rose Metal Press, a publisher of literary work in hybrid genres, and a founding member of Poems While You Wait. Co-editor of The Selected Writings of René Magritte, forthcoming from Alma Books next year, she is also the author of seven books of poetry, nonfiction, and fiction, including, most recently, the novel O, Democracy! (2014) and the novel in poems Robinson Alone (2012). With Elisa Gabbert, she is the author of the poetry collection That Tiny Insane Voluptuousness (Otoliths, 2008) and the chapbook The Kind of Beauty That Has Nowhere to Go (Hyacinth Girl, 2013). She lives in Chicago with her husband, the writer Martin Seay, and teaches at DePaul.
Kathleen Rooney is wearing a mactaggart vintage Joan of Arc pendant with customized chain affixed with beads and a mactaggart brass chain mill studded ring.
#Kathleen Rooney#rosemetalpress#rene magritte#almabooks#mactaggart jewelry#poetry#jewelry#poems#art#poemjewelry
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from L'HEURE BLEUE, OR THE JUDY POEMS
A walk helps a little, a pause
where I am moving
and other things stay the same,
or have less distinguishing detail.
The sky in this mood is more
supple. Not quality of life,
but quality of suffering.
Just to say “I suffer” helps.
A dog rubs its heavy black body
against my thigh,
thrusts its head between my legs.
I hate this automatic shame.
I hate when dogs look like people.
A woman calls to the dog
and apologizes.
I have no name to call back.
::::::::::::::::::::::
I could know him, and like him,
without understanding,
like liner notes to a jazz album.
But liking doesn’t lead to love.
You switch to a different axis.
A self-indulgent misery
is best, a cathartic performance
I perform myself.
I read that happy people have
an inaccurate sense of time. The descent
as slow falling. The dead
don’t get any more dead.
When remembering him,
I’m never lonely.
Elisa Gabbert is the author of The Self Unstable and The French Exit. Her next book, L'Heure Bleue, or The Judy Poems, will be out next year from Black Ocean.
These poems originally appeared in Phoebe.
Elisa Gabbert is wearing the mactaggart weighted brass with turquoise patina u-lock on mixed vintage brass chain
#elisagabbert#theselfunstable#thefrenchexit#l'heurebleue#thejudypoems#blackocean#birdsllc#mactaggartjewelry
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WHY I AM NOT A PAINTER
Almost full-frontal female parapet decorates
Familiar strata, a necklace performing
Opposite actions, edge motif loosening
Unbinding the identity of the scene
A marshy landscape confronted by
The opposite of an audience
An ally, a skeleton of a witch’s kitchen
A grotesque representation of love & collateral
Motion, a pile of books topped with a skull
A surface set in letters captioning the belly
Blotchy eros, full-bleed translation, women
On top, visible in bed’s apparent absence
That space with red absorbed poses
City views polarized strangely
The surrounding hills so accurate
I went to the highest place I could to redraw it
To recast the models of self-portraits
I adhered power to these portraits
An indentation to the upper lip
Took refuge in the understanding of a white shirt
A finger set against a dark background
Within an oval frame of chronological gestures
Copies with no location
This is the history of nowhere
So unaffected by what is going on
MISTRANSLATION CCI
or MEMORIAL DAY
Beneath my reactions
Are stronger reactions
Erroneous boyfriend,
A plague on both our houses
I cut my losses
Stop going along for the ride—
Helvetica subtitles & bad music from the ’90s
I should know better
Whiskey rosé piña colada michelada
It had everything to do with freedom—
You’ve gotta give for what you take
I’m waving my fuck you flag at you
Slowly, I’m eating this hotdog sonorously
All by myself
Ali Power is the author of A Poem for Record Keepers forthcoming from Argos Books (Spring 2016) and is the editor of New York School Painters & Poets: Neon in Daylight (Rizzoli, October 2014).
Ali Power is wearing the golden body armor, the brass skull necklace and a 3 spear pink quartz necklace on long leather cord, she’s passionate in her mactaggart jewelry and laughs aloud for all to see.
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Without
It is dangerous to love anyone
to love
to create people you will die for
dawn pinks its way through the dark morning
poems call out through the computer’s invisible speakers
about rainforests, about “natural”
what a concept
I was abed alone
except in social media apps
where we half exist
our made up lives held up against our made up lives
if you were the only one
this would be something
you can go to a place where they will pay you to work
and what you care deeply about will not matter
this is a schism, a job description
she will scare you into a type of listening
or you will die
or anyway you will die
maybe listening you will hear this
the long hot line of the poem invading you
we will say you look tired when what we mean
is how can you still be living
I want to say there is a brilliance
& I have been so long underground
here in my grief as if losing was an invitation
these are all the ways we walk about in the world
watch as I break against everything, invisible
nothing to lose then this: You have to wake up
and take your life or it takes you
if you never consequent your actions
then a type of wording silences, say you this
so I’ll tell the pretties what they want to hear
glamour the water falling, glamour the night’s cover
what you can explain away does not equal an explanation
Affair
trespass not a scene you or she could understand
& in that way, what we agreed was just sex
I took so I could write about it
exchange deleted, but I keep
a hoarding of language my clutch
hunger once as he would say a need to control
& somewhat close to truth
but aren’t we pulled along
face like a blank slate even when he says
I want you I wonder
what does that mean let’s not
discuss what we can’t disclose
I like to think about the view from outside
where drawn a circle we did in private undertones
prosper, I have known the knot of marriage
how slippery it is to be given to another
switched place this dagger what we do is let
other people bound our troubled parts
look baby, this lifetime is a drizzling
time is no matter we dig in unable to quit
this madness pretending the world
holds our desire
Megan Burns is the publisher at Trembling Pillow press and runs the Blood Jet Poetry Reading Series in New Orleans. Her third book Commitment was just released from Lavender Ink.
Megan Burns is wearing a Unicorn Buckle mactaggart necklace and her doll is holding a mulit-chains mactaggart piece
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Earth Goddess and Sky God
You haven't formed me. I'm a monster still.
Then give me your body. Give it to me in rain.
Look up and fill me. I am too dark to stain.
You haven't held me. I hold apart my will
Spread dryness through me. I have a night to fill
in high heat-speckled waves, apart from where
I will come down. I have nothing to share
with breath. I will give it back. There is one to kill,
one to renew, and one to persuade to weep.
My night holds everything except for sleep.
A BLESSING ON THE POETS
Patient earth-digger, impatient fire-maker,
Hungry word-taker and roving sound-lover,
Sharer and saver, muser and acher,
You who are open to hide or uncover,
Time-keeper and –hater, wake-sleeper, sleep-waker;
May language’s language, the silence that lies
Under each word, move you over and over,
Turning you, wondering, back to surprise.
HOMEBIRTH
Home is a birthplace since you came to me,
pouring yourself down through me like a soul,
calling the cosmos imperiously
into me so it could reach to unroll
out from the womb where the wild rushes start
in a quick, steady heartbeat not from my own heart.
This is my body, which you made to break,
which gave you to make you, till you bear its mark,
which held you till you found your body to take,
(open at home on my bed in the dark).
photos by: Meredith Kennedy
*** The poems are published in Spells: New and Selected Poems (Wesleyan UP, 2013)
Annie Finch is the author of six books of poetry, most recently Spells: New and Selected Poems (Wesleyan University Press, 2013). Her poems have appeared in anthologies including The Norton Anthology of World Poetry and The Penguin Book of Twentieth-Century American Poetry. She has also published twelve books on poetic form and craft, most recently A Poet’s Craft: A Comprehensive Guide to Making and Sharing Your Poetry (University of Michigan Press, 2012) and Measure for Measure: An Anthology of Poetic Meters (Everymans Library, 2015). She is the founder and director of poetcraftcircles.com and hopes Mactaggart fans will come check it out.
Annie Finch is wearing the Queens Decision necklace with matching lime green chain dangly mactaggart earrings.
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animal human machine
i abandoned human
moved outside my body brushed
my eyelashes better to see
you see me
and we got along fine
both of us having that amnesia
that lets us bring things into the body
take them out
and move them around the house
i watched movement witnessed transaction
at 3:03 a shadow cut the building in half
at 3:10 the sun went in
the building stood whole again
or so I thought
when I see a thing
i make it real
a woman naturally eclipsing a street lamp
a woman naturally smoking in the hallway
a woman naturally standing at a table counting money
a woman naturally wrestling bacteria with her own hands
a woman naturally in a room petting all the stuffed animals
a woman naturally organizing bags of flour on a shelf
a woman naturally removing splinters from her thigh with a tweezer
a woman naturally tyrannizing a room of windows
a woman naturally at the bottom of a river
a woman naturally in a sunroom confessing to all the plants
a small white room
on the ground floor
pillows stacked like cats
here and there color
a dog barking
the bed and a dust ruffle
the dresser and its weight
the clapboard dusty
the bed a pair of wire framed glasses
a dumb light bed
built for one
as if we’re expected to die
in our sleep wearing shoes
in the bed masturbating
the room is a giant aperture
the mattress is very expensive
a large dog and the small of my neck
a water soluble paradox
the rooms are connected
the damage is muzzled
dreams are not accidental
a pencil cactus
slanting rectangles of paper
they come built into the rooms
I walk across the room toward the door
I knock into a piece of furniture
I don’t want to be sentimental
but I walk across the room
and objects move out of my way
the dog had me by the neck
the man was shirtless
the kitchen floor was cracked
the man was blond and bearded
the dog was toothed
the door opened from the inside
the motion was not a magician but a man
not (a) disappearance but (b) invisibility
the writing on the wall was in Greek
the nails on the wall held nothing visible
a crash of motorcycles projected miniature
the kitchen floor was cracked
the man had me by the neck
the miniature was not so miniature up close
the magician was shirtless
the dog cracked
the crash opened from the inside
the motion was not a magician but a floor
the writing on the wall was bearded
Alex Cuff teaches public high school, studies herbal medicine and edits No, Dear magazine. She lives in Brooklyn.
Alex is sporting a 4 Mixed Texture Vintage Chainz mactaggart piece.
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Dara Cerv lives and writes in Jamaica Plain, MA. Recent poetry appears or is forthcoming in Jellyfish, The Volta, apt, and Whiskey Island. Her first chapbook will be published by Sixth Finch in 2015.
Dara Cerv is wearing a classically long ceramic beaded piece with interspersed dangles, the top right picture shows her wearing the grey dagger earrings, and below that, the window ring in sterling silver, with a sterling silver hammered ring stack, and the horse ring in copper with the oxidized figure, and below this you will find Dara wearing a California beach rock necklace on a wavy bar chain.
#dara cerv#sixth finch#volta#horse ring#apt#jamaicaplain#jellyfish poetry#poetry#poetry and beauty#poetry and jewelry#Mactaggarjewelry.com#mactaggart jewelry
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Angela Veronica Wong is the author of the full-length poetry collection how to survive a hotel fire (Coconut Books) and the chapbook Dear Johnny, In Your Last Letter, which won a Poetry Society of America New York Fellowship. Her poetry has been anthologized in The Best American Poetry (with Amy Lawless; Scribner) and is forthcoming in Please Excuse This Poem (Viking). Her fiction is forthcoming in Denver Quarterly. She is on the internet at www.angelaveronicawong.com.
Angela Veronica Wong is sporting a slick body chain with tiers of colored chain, a rare mactaggart find.
#angelaveronicawong#coconutbooks#Mactaggarjewelry.com#amy lawless#poems#psa#poetry#poetry and beauty
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Gina Myers is the author of two full-length poetry collections, A Model Year (Coconut Books, 2009) and Hold It Down (Coconut Books, 2013), as well as numerous chapbooks. Originally from Saginaw, MI, she now lives in Philadelphia where she assembles books for Lame House Press and works as the Senior Editor of Coconut Magazine.
Gina Myers is sporting a classic mactaggart piece called Chain Days: Brass & Steel Tiers
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erica lewis lives in San Francisco where she is a fine arts publicist. Her work has appeared in various anthologies and journals, most recently Apartment, The Brooklyn Rail, BOMB, Boog City, Bombay Gin, clinic and Coconut, among others. Books include the precipice of jupiter (Queue Books) and camera obscura (BlazeVox Books), both collaborations with artist Mark Stephen Finein, and the solo project murmur in the inventory (Shearsman Books, 2013). Two new chap projects are forthcoming in 2015. She is currently at work completing her box set trilogy. She was born in Cincinnati, Ohio.
erica lewis is wearing the boldest of mixed brass chainz, and sterling silver body armor in top left pic, below her dog is sporting a classic mactaggart button necklace and she's wearing a green arrow, to the far right she's wearing a vintage belt buckle necklace.
#erica lewis#Mactaggarjewelry.com#mactaggart jewelry#sterling silver jewelry#poetry and beauty#poetry and jewelry#brenda iijima
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Jennifer Nelson's first book of poems, Aim at the Centaur Stealing Your Wife, is forthcoming with ugly duckling presse in Fall 2015. She is an art historian and postdoctoral fellow at the Michigan Society of Fellows at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. She is currently working on a book about the history of measurement and relativism in early modern northern Europe, and teaching about ekphrasis.
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Jessica Smith, Founding Editor of Foursquare and name magazines, serves as the Librarian for Indian Springs School, where she curates the Indian Springs School Visiting Writers Series. A native of Birmingham, Alabama, she received her B.A. in English and Comparative Literature: Language Theory, M.A. in Comparative Literature, and M.L.S. from SUNY Buffalo, where she participated in the Poetics Program. She is the author of numerous chapbooks including mnemotechnics (above/ground 2013) and two full-length books of poetry, Organic Furniture Cellar (Outside Voices 2006) and Life-List (Chax Press 2015).
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Alina Gregorian, while Reciting the Flagpole, wears a necklace of a ship that has literally been set aflame; she rides with the crew on deck, and can be seen as a survivor “by way of natural selection.”
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Alina Gregorian is the author of Flying Bark, a forthcoming chapbook from Monk Books, and an, as yet, untitled chapbook from Diez. Her poems have appeared in Sink Review, Boston Review, GlitterPony, and other journals. She curates a video poetry series at the Huffington Post, co-curates Triptych Readings, and co-edits the collaboration journal Bridge. She teaches creative writing at Rutgers University, and lives in Brooklyn, NY.
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Andrea Rexilius is wearing Necklace of A Thousand Colors and interacting with Winter issue of Fence "to remind herself to take up less space."
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Andrea Rexilius is the author of Half of What They Carried Flew Away (Letter Machine, 2012) and To Be Human Is To Be A Conversation(Rescue Press, 2011). For three years she was an editor of the Denver Quarterly. She has worked with elementary and high school students as a program coordinator and poetry instructor for Writers in the Schools, America Scores, and After School Matters, and has taught literature and creative writing at Regis University and University of Denver. She currently teaches BA & MFA courses at Naropa University’s Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics where she also coordinates the JKS Summer Writing Program. She is a member of the Poets’ Theater group, GASP (Girls Assembling Something Perpetual). With Eric Baus, she co-edits Marcel Press.
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