Some lines I cut as the
author of this book:
The Haitian poet Roumer
admires an ass so spectacular
It is like a gorgeous
basked brimming with fruits and meat
When I’m out walking I think
of this
Rationing an individual
thought
To my classified
adulteries
I have to dig into a
platform of reason
Create a pond in the
land of misconduct
Though because of truth
I have trouble with its reflections (“2010 – 2015”)
The
poems that make up New York City poet and artist Eric Amling’s first trade
collection, From the Author’s Private Collection (Birds, LLC: 2015), are constructed out of an accumulation of
phrases, as each poem builds its slow and unexpected way towards something odd,
even confusing, and bafflingly coherent. Writing on Amling’s visual art in the “Visual Interview: A Poetic Interlude with Eric Amling” at The Wild, Michael Valinsky refers to Amling as “a master
collage-maker,” a description that could also refer to his poetry. “It’s hard
to explain / My ghost writing / When I remained / An insular entity,” he
writes, to open the eighteen-part sequence “Rare and Special Interests.” Amling’s
poems might appear, at first, to be all over the place, but manage to include a
multitude of directions while maintaining a coherent through-line; the mélange is
simply how he travels from one point to another. One could compare his poems to
the work of Calgary poet Natalie Simpson, who also works from a series of notes
structured together in a series of collisions, specifically her Thrum (2014) [see my review of such here]. “How do you kill / A mountain of a man / But with a river of fries /
Grass / Growing around the gurneys / Because the cancer patients / Are in
hammocks,” he writes, further in the same extended poem. In poems that stretch,
fragment and sequence, it is really in the collision of phrases and sentences
that his pieces cohere, coming together from a near-chaos into something unique,
connecting pockets of clarity and insight to form a broader spectrum of serious
questions and observations on culture, morality, human interaction and the
nature of art. As he writes to open the poem “Liquid Assets”: “The civic
purposes of the museum, were not to be a ‘mere cabinet of curiosities which
serve to kill time for the idle’ but instead ‘tend directly to humanize, to
educate and refine a practical and labourious people.’ Given his main focus as
a visual artist, it would seem his poetry exists both as a serious work that
stands on its own merits as well as an extension of his visual practice, each
medium allowing a potential insight into his work in the other. I would be
curious to see how his practice continues.
I assure you these
sensations will be obliterated from memory
On an afternoon walk to
the outlet for sunglasses
Where residents form
the sum of a paralyzing equation
In windbreakers
dreaming a collective coupe
Like a postcard of a
cruise ship taped to a prison cinderblock
You see teenage
skyscrapers on the horizon
And one can’t help but
think of entrepreneurs
Eating macho candy bars
A cell phone vibrating
a beach of desk pennies
A self-image no
distance can cure
Like a photographer
You are not translating
the world from scratch
Go meet the minimum
requirements
Do it for the right
reasons
Get on with showing
your love already (“Pinnacle Meltdown”)
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