NORMAL
SONNET
There’s a book people write by pretending
to be another author. It’s called life.
Conceptual art’s about goaltending
more boring arcs of self toward meaning. Life,
how far north am I of New York City?
A brief snow held by buzzed grass means pity.
The wall of want and should grows soft and fat.
I’m tired of lacunae. When my cat
licks itself in front of old jewelry
it performs confessional poetry,
which, like one’s historical cruelty,
no one escapes. I say potpourri
for two thousand and bury my parents.
I repeat the parable of the talents.
Winner
of the 2016 Sawtooth Poetry Prize, as judged by Anne Boyer, is Chicago poet and
art historian Jennifer Nelson’s second collection of poetry, CIVILIZATION MAKES ME LONELY (Boise ID:
Ahsahta Press, 2017), following her Aim at the Centaur Stealing Your Wife (Ugly Duckling Presse, 2015). Even from her
book titles alone, one can see the overlap in her interests between art history
and poetry, and CIVILIZATION MAKES ME
LONELY is thick with influence from and engagement with history, art and
everything in-between, something she discussed in an interview with Jessica Tolbert, following the publication of her first collection:
I saw you
are a professor of art history. Which came first, your interest in art or your
interest in poetry?
This is a really great question, which I think
(because of the verb tense of “came”) ends up being about class. Like many
people, I’ve participated in a lot of different classes in my life. But when I
was little, the sort of “culture” things in my house were the piano,
watercolors of golf courses, Egyptian hieroglyphs on papyrus, and those
leatherbound books with the gold letters on them and the gold page-edges. The
piano, a Chickering upright, was probably the most “authentic” of the objects.
It was kept in tune and I took it pretty seriously, as a small kid.
My parents were in full-blown aspiration mode.
Our class, as a unit, was shifting, and our culture things reflected that. I’m
not ashamed of that, but it’s a real factor.
But the hieroglyphs were in my parents’
bedroom, so in any contest between poetry and art, the leatherbound books were
going to beat the golf course watercolors every time. Keats, HUGE in my early
life, then weirdly secularized for me when I took Helen Vendler’s Keats seminar
as a first-year in college. (Was so saddened by her race-blindness in recent
years, and I mean that term in both sad senses.) Who else. I never read
Tristram Shandy but I opened it a lot. Anyway, that’s not poetry. Donne was
there, too, I think? Definitely Shakespeare, Pope, a rhymed version of some
Homer. In any case, poetry, definitely, was first.
Thank you for not asking which comes first now!
By
taking on “civilization,” Nelson’s poems, in their own way, take on fragments
and elements from throughout the whole of human history, and the poems in this
collection engage with references ad threads including Roman protests, the City
of God, Coleridge, Icelandic names, ekphrasis and Renaissance paintings. In
certain ways, her poems can be seen as sketches or research notes from her
day-job, but just as easily playfully expand and further explore ideas in ways
that being an ‘art historian’ might simply not have space for. Her poems are
sharp and witty, and exploratory in a way that seeks out knowledge from
unlikely connections. The title of the collection, incidentally, comes from the
first couplet of her poem “LET ME BE LONELY,” that reads: “The first noble
savages were German / Civilization makes me lonely [.]”
ARS
ACADEMICA
Leonardo’s studies of fluid motion are an
exception. Mostly it’s people bad at math taking calculators to whirlwinds.
Sometimes murder is beautiful. We have to drink blood. I admire the people who
never get caught. But I keep trying not to kill
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