Not
to know, but to go on.
white underpainting
floats up through
milky as wringing
darker colors it
carries just-washed glue
brushes over the sink
as water floats paper
before saturation
waiting is the color
reveals its inks of what draws nearer
without touching
The Empty Form Goes All the Way to Heaven (Boise ID: Ahsahta Press, 2015) is Philadelphia poet and publisher Brian Teare’s fifth trade poetry collection, after The Room Where I Was Born (University of
Wisconsin Press, 2003), Sight Map
(University of California Press, 2009), Pleasure
(Ahsahta Press, 2010) and Companion Grasses (Richmond CA: Omnidawn, 2013) [see my review of such here]. As
Teare describes in the preface to the collection, The Empty Form Goes All the Way to Heaven is a poetry book constructed
from the onset of his own illness, which prompted his discovery of the infamously
reclusive American (born and raised in Canada) abstract expressionist painter Agnes Martin (1912-2004). He writes: “When in 2009 I began writing the poems in
this book, I knew nothing about Agnes Martin. Early during the onset of a
chronic illness, I opened her Writings
and found ‘The Untroubled Mind’ to be a comfort. But as the illness deepened I began
to ‘seek her out’ when I could through research in museums, libraries, and
archives. These poems set my life in relation to my long encounter with her
painting, drawing, writing, and the metaphysics she argued was implicit in
them.” Known for her use of lines, grids and fields of subtle colour, Teare’s
poems employ an intriguing structural influence from Martin’s artwork,
stretching her colour field into a series of texts stretched across the field
of the page (and the book is 8 inches by 9.5 inches, in case you are wondering
the size and scope of his physical field). Certainly, Teare’s use of empty
space and the length and breadth of the page isn’t new, as evidenced from his Companion Grasses, but the influence of
the grid structure from Agnes Martin allow for a curious exploration of how
words are shaped, and even read, playing off each other in nearly-overlapping
lines. In a recent interview with Christy Davids on the new collection, posted at The Conversant, he writes:
In both Sight Map (University of California 2009)
and Companion Grasses (Omnidawn
2013), I was working off of my own kind of personal reading of Olson’s “Projective Verse”—I think that’s not surprising for anyone who knows my
work—and in Companion Grasses that was particularly true in terms of thinking
about prosody, and also thinking about poems on the page as being a scoring of
an encounter with a place or a species. Because so many of those poems—all of
them, really—were written on foot, were written in the field, I was really
trying to use prosody and typography as a musical registration of an encounter,
and combining Olson’s belief in the page as a kind of musical score with the
ways in which breath and ear change in relation to whatever you’re in relation
to. I was interested in the phenomenology of prosody—that it could,
theoretically, capture or register relation differently between each encounter
with place, with species, with a particular day or meteorology or whatever.
As
well, unlike Martin’s reluctance, if not refusal, to release biographical
detail, Teare’s The Empty Form Goes All
the Way to Heaven directly engages his illness, as he writes to open the
poem “We are not the instruments of fate nor are we the pawns of fate we are
the materials of fate.”: “I leave each doctor’s appointment ashamed to be ill
// the philosopher argues the verbal expression of pain // undiagnosed my body so illegible no one can read it // replaces
pain without offering a description of it [.]” As part of his author biography at the Ahsahta Press website, Teare offers:
I hate that a biography
like this largely leaves out the formative details: a difficult family life,
the disaster of coming out in the rural South, my first love dead of AIDS,
falling in love again in California, years of chronic illness, my discovery of
meditation. True to my early schooling in Confessional writing, these
narratives are in my books. But more importantly, my books understand
autobiography to be as much intellectual as physical, as aesthetic as it is
emotional. I’ve striven to fashion a poetics that can inscribe experience on
all the registers on which it occurs: high to low, abstract to literal,
philosophy to pornography. Similarly, I’ve striven to render the poem’s form
flexible and sensitive enough to register the myriad shifts native to
experience. Inspired in equal parts by Charles Olson’s essay on projective
verse and my training as a letterpress and digital typesetter, I’ve recently
come to believe that design is both proprioceptive and plastic, capable of
carrying embodied knowledge and visual information that exceeds the semantic.
The poems of The Empty Form Goes All the
Way to Heaven are the direct expression of this belief.
The
poems in The Empty Form Goes All the Way
to Heaven are structured in three untitled sections, with poems floating
through direct and indirect reference and response to, and influence from,
Martin’s artwork and writing, as well as his own ongoing illness. As the poem “Defeated you will stand at the door of
your house and welcome the unknown.” begins: “chronic nausea / chronic non //
narrative even / the public health / eventually
the surface gets interesting [.]” The introduction of a further abstraction
into his work is quite compelling, compared to the more direct lines and
lineages of Companion Grasses, and
allow for a far more visual and meditative flow, expanding his repertoire to
extend into a deeper use of the fragment, collision and critical intelligence. His utterly fascinating author statement on the Ahsahta Press website (I find
myself quite taken with the clarity and ease of his prose) ends with:
I worked on the poems for six years. Keenly
aware that Martin herself avoided autobiographical narrative in her writing and
representation in her visual work, I couldn’t help but think that chronic
illness seemed the perfect fusion of autobiography and formal abstraction.
Pain was largely wordless, but it was also my life—a somatic texture in
which illness became a chronic duration and duration (time) became texture
(form). And things anyways happened. Over those six years, I got access to
public health care and exhausted my treatment options without getting a
diagnosis, I started seeing a Chinese medical practitioner for herbs and
acupuncture (which helped), and I also started a meditation practice
(which helped). But I remained ill. And I kept returning to Martin and her
work, even going to museums, libraries, and archives to get “closer” to
her, the way young curators and artists had once sought her out in
the desert of New Mexico.
Eventually I realized I’d been looking for
someone or something to help me change my life. I’d been seeking healers
and teachers, some of whom did in fact help, some of whom didn’t.
Eventually I ended up in the hospital (again) and realized help might not
be coming, at least not in the form I’d wanted. Lying on the gurney, I
asked: What’s the right attitude toward suffering? An answer
came: It neither lies to you nor makes you suffer more. And more
than my own suffering I heard the man in the room next to me weeping as a
doctor drained his wound. When I stopped wanting a teacher, when I stopped
waiting for an end to suffering, my life did change. I did in fact suffer
less. When I gave up the illusion of salvation, I found a modicum of rest
and some room for the experience of joy. When I stopped needing Martin to
help me, I could finally look at her work in companionable awe.
This is a fascinating review (and introduction). Will look for this book -- and the others too. Thanks for alerting readers to Brian's work.
ReplyDelete